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Blazing Heat In Iraq As Baghdad, South Top 50 °C July 28, 2025

  • Writer: Ana Cunha-Busch
    Ana Cunha-Busch
  • Jul 27
  • 2 min read
Smoke billows as protestors gather to block roads in protest of water shortages and the drying up of rivers in the Al Hamriya area of central Iraq. (AFP)
Smoke billows as protestors gather to block roads in protest of water shortages and the drying up of rivers in the Al Hamriya area of central Iraq. (AFP)

By AFP - Agence France Presse


Blazing Heat In Iraq As Baghdad, South Top 50C


Iraqis grappled on Monday with searing heat in the capital Baghdad and parts of the country's south, where the weather service said temperatures reached 51C in the shade.


Iraq's 46 million people face rising temperatures, chronic water shortages, and year-on-year droughts, in a country intensely impacted by the effects of climate change.


Summer temperatures often climb to 52 °C, especially in July and August.


On central Baghdad's bustling streets on Monday, people sought respite from the sweltering heat in front of swirling mist fans set up near restaurants and shops.


Some pedestrians drenched their faces with cold water purchased from sidewalk vendors, while drivers had to pull over to the roadside to cool down their engines.


The national weather service said the temperature reached 51 °C in Baghdad and areas to the capital's southeast, from the central Wasit province to Dhi Qar, Missan, and Basra in the south.


Another eight provinces hit 50 °C on Monday, with temperatures expected to drop slightly on Wednesday, according to the official Iraq News Agency.


In recent years, Iraqis rallied every summer to protest regular power cuts and water shortages that plague their daily lives.


Hundreds of people protested on Friday and Sunday near the cities of Hilla and Diwaniyah, south of Baghdad, blocking roads and burning tires.


Iraq's water resources ministry has said that "this year is one of the driest since 1933", and that water reserves are down to only eight percent of their full capacity.


Authorities blame reduced river flows in part on upstream dams built in neighbouring Iran and Turkey, which Iraq says have dramatically shrunk the once-mighty Tigris and Euphrates, whose waters have been crucial for irrigation for millennia.


Temperatures have risen significantly elsewhere in the region, with neighbouring Turkey registering on Saturday 50.5 °C in its southeast, a nationwide record.


Last week, a severe heatwave in Iran disrupted water and electricity supplies in much of the country.



rh/ami

 
 
 

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