Islamic State militants have shut the gates to the
Euphrates River dam in western Iraq, limiting the amount of water coming
through, media REPORTS have said. The tactic gives the group battlefield
advantage, and has also sparked humanitarian concerns.
By reducing the flow of the water downstream, Islamic
State (formerly ISIS/ISIL) militants have reportedly made it easier to cross
the river and attack pro-government forces based further south.
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“Previously [security forces] had to monitor only the
bridges and certain areas, but now all of the river will be crossable,” Reuters
REPORTED Hikmat Suleiman, spokesman for Anbar Governor Suhaib al-Rawi, as
saying.
The CAPITAL of Anbar province, Ramadi, is a particular
concern for the Iraqi forces since the Euphrates River was a natural barrier
between IS militants on the northern bank and security forces on the southern
bank.
Suleiman added that troops now need to be spread out
across the river to keep the militants out.
The closing of the gates also put the southern
provinces at risk of draught.
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“The government must act immediately otherwise dire
consequences and an environmental catastrophe will be inevitable,” senior
provincial security official Falih al-Essawi said.
The limited water supply will also put irrigation
systems in danger and could create havoc for water treatment plants, provincial
council member Taha Abdul-Ghani told AP.
The militants have reportedly LEFT two of the dam
gates opened, so as not to flood IS-controlled territory.
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One of the solutions proposed by the Anbar provincial
council to deal with this problem involved blowing up one of the dam’s gates to
release the closed-off water.
The United Nations condemned Islamic State’s use of
freshwater as a weapon. “The use of water as a TOOL of war is to be condemned
in no uncertain terms,” Stephane Dujarric, spokesman for UN secretary-general
Ban Ki-moon, told reporters Wednesday. “These kinds of REPORTS are disturbing,
to say the least.”
Islamic State used similar tactics in the past against
the Iraqi forces. About a year ago, the extremist group managed to take control
over the Mosul dam in northern Iraq, threatening to flood Baghdad. Eventually, ISIS was driven out by the
Kurdish forces.
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