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Iran dams threaten Iraqi water supplies

Baghdad, IRAQ: Iraqis fill pots with water from a pipe linked to Diyala River, crossing an area nearby a garbage dump, northeast of Baghdad, 07 June 2007. [WISSAM AL-OKAILI/AFP via Getty Images]

Iraqis fill pots with water from a pipe linked to Diyala River, crossing an area nearby a garbage dump, northeast of Baghdad, 07 June 2007. [WISSAM AL-OKAILI/AFP via Getty Images]

Iraq’s agriculture industry has been hit hard as a result of ongoing Iranian dam projects which reduce the water flow and block major water supplies from two of the region’s main rivers, Middle East Eye reported.

Farmers in the eastern province of Diyala and the Kurdish region say their livelihoods are under threat as a result of Tehran re-directing the Sirwan and Little Zab rivers to dams in Iran, forcing some Iraqis to leave their towns and villages.

The two rivers in Iraq are considered the primary sources of livelihood for nearly two million people.

“In a couple of years, Iran’s dams projects will not only create a catastrophe that will force people to migrate to other places, but will have an impact on farmland, wildlife and tourism,” Director of Iraq’s Darbandikhan Dam Rahman Khani told Middle East Eye.

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