
-
Field of Gold sparkles on opening day of Royal Ascot
-
Alcaraz wins testing Queen's opener, Draper cruises
-
'Second time I've died': Nobel laureate Jelinek denies death reports
-
Oil prices jump, stocks drop as traders track Israel-Iran crisis
-
Swiss insurers estimate glacier damage at $393 mn
-
Premiership club Gloucester sign All Blacks prop Laulala
-
Spain says 'overvoltage' caused huge April blackout
-
Russian strikes kill 10 in 'horrific' attack on Kyiv
-
Record stand puts Bangladesh in command in first Sri Lanka Test
-
Galthie defends second-string France squad for New Zealand tour
-
China's Xi in Kazakhstan to cement 'eternal' Central Asia ties
-
How much damage has Israel inflicted on Iran's nuclear programme?
-
Male victim breaks 'suffocating' silence on Kosovo war rapes
-
Disgraced referee Coote charged by FA over Klopp remarks
-
Queer astronaut documentary takes on new meaning in Trump's US
-
UK startup looks to cut shipping's carbon emissions
-
Roma not aiming for Serie A title 'but you never know', says Gasperini
-
UK automakers cheer US trade deal, as steel tariffs left in limbo
-
Pope Leo XIV to revive papal holidays at summer palace
-
French ex-PM Fillon given suspended sentence over wife's fake job
-
US retail sales slip more than expected after rush to beat tariffs
-
Farrell has no regrets over short France stint with Racing 92
-
Global oil demand to dip in 2030, first drop since Covid: IEA
-
Indonesia volcano spews colossal ash tower, alert level raised
-
Dutch suggest social media ban for under-15s
-
Russian strikes kill 16 in 'horrific' attack on Kyiv
-
Gaza rescuers say Israel army kills more than 50 people near aid site
-
Tehranis caught between fear and resolve as air war intensifies
-
Oil prices rally, stocks slide as traders track Israel-Iran crisis
-
Sweden's 'Queen of Trash' jailed over toxic waste scandal
-
Trump says wants 'real end' to Israel-Iran conflict, not ceasefire
-
Poll finds public turning to AI bots for news updates
-
'Spectacular' Viking burial site discovered in Denmark
-
Why stablecoins are gaining popularity
-
Man Utd CEO Berrada sticking to 2028 Premier League title aim
-
Iraq treads a tightrope to avoid spillover from Israel-Iran conflict
-
Payback time: how Dutch players could power Suriname to the World Cup
-
Oil prices rally, stocks mixed as traders track Israel-Iran crisis
-
Bank of Japan holds rates, will slow bond purchase taper
-
Thai cabinet approves bid to host Bangkok F1 race
-
Oil prices swing with stocks as traders keep tabs on Israel-Iran crisis
-
Amsterdam honours its own Golden Age sculpture master
-
Russian strikes kill 14 in 'horrific' attack on Kyiv
-
Taiwan tests sea drones as China keeps up military pressure
-
Survivors of Bosnia 'rape camps' come forward 30 years on
-
Australian mushroom murder suspect told 'lies upon lies': prosecutor
-
Israel, Iran trade blows as air war rages into fifth day
-
'Farewell, Comrade Boll': China fans hail German table tennis ace
-
G7 urges Middle East de-escalation as Trump makes hasty summit exit
-
With EuroPride, Lisbon courts LGBTQ travellers

In a parched land, Iraqi gazelles dying of hunger
Gazelles at an Iraqi wildlife reserve are dropping dead from hunger, making them the latest victims in a country where climate change is compounding hardships after years of war.
In little over one month, the slender-horned gazelle population at the Sawa reserve in southern Iraq has plunged from 148 to 87.
Lack of funding along with a shortage of rain has deprived them of food, as the country's drought dries up lakes and leads to declining crop yields.
President Barham Saleh has warned that tackling climate change "must become a national priority for Iraq as it is an existential threat to the future of our generations to come".
The elegant animals, also known as rhim gazelles, are recognisable by their gently curved horns and sand-coloured coats. The International Union for Conservation of Nature classes the animals as endangered on its Red List.
Outside Iraq's reserves, they are mostly found in the deserts of Libya, Egypt and Algeria but are unlikely to number "more than a few hundred" there, according to the Red List.
Turki al-Jayashi, director of the Sawa reserve, said gazelle numbers there plunged by around 40 percent in just one month to the end of May.
"They no longer have a supply of food because we have not received the necessary funds" which had come from the government, Jayashi said.
Iraq's finances are under pressure after decades of war in a poverty-stricken country needing agricultural and other infrastructure upgrades.
It is grappling with corruption, a financial crisis and political deadlock which has left Iraq without a new government months after October elections.
"The climate has also strongly affected the gazelles," which lack forage in the desert-like region, Jayashi added.
- Barren soil -
At three other Iraqi reserves further north, the number of rhim gazelles has fallen by 25 percent in the past three years to 224 animals, according to an agriculture ministry official who asked to remain anonymous.
He blamed the drop at the reserves in Al-Madain near Baghdad, and in Diyala and Kirkuk on a "lack of public financing".
At the Sawa reserve, established in 2007 near the southern city of Samawah, the animals pant under the scorching sun.
The brown and barren earth is dry beyond recovery, and meagre shrubs that offer slight nourishment are dry and tough.
Some gazelles, including youngsters still without horns, nibble hay spread out on the flat ground.
Others take shelter under a metal roof, drinking water from a trough.
Summer hasn't even begun but temperatures have already hit 50 degrees Celsius (122 Fahrenheit) in parts of the country.
The effects of drought have been compounded by dramatic falls in the level of some rivers due to dams upstream and on tributaries in Turkey and Iran.
Desertification affects 39 percent of Iraqi land, the country's president has warned.
"Water scarcity negatively affects all our regions. It will lead to reduced fertility of our agricultural lands because of salination," Saleh said.
He has sent 100 million dinars (over $68,000) in an effort to help save the Sawa reserve's rhim gazelles, Jayashi said.
But the money came too late for some.
Five more have just died, their carcasses lying together on the brown earth.
T.Ward--AMWN