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Iraq sandstorm closes airports, puts 3,700 people in hospital

A wheelchair-user is helped across a road in dangerously low visibility in the southern Iraqi city of Basra on Monday.
A wheelchair-user is helped across a road in dangerously low visibility in the southern Iraqi city of Basra on Monday.

A sandstorm swept through Iraq, filling the air with choking dust that closed airports and put more than 3,700 people in hospital with breathing difficulties, the health ministry said Tuesday.

Visibility fell to less than one kilometer (barely half a mile) in central and southern cities as the storm cloaked the region in an eerie orange haze, AFP photographers reported.

Basra and Najaf airports both closed for the duration of the storm, which began to dissipate on Tuesday morning.

Health ministry spokesperson Saif al-Badr said Basra was the worst-hit province, accounting for more than 1,000 of the 3,747 attributed to the sandstorm.

Many of those who dared to venture out in Basra wore to protect themselves from the choking dust, an AFP photographer reported.

A pedestrian struggles to breathe as the sandstorm clogs the air with dust in the central Iraqi city of Najaf.
A pedestrian struggles to breathe as the sandstorm clogs the air with dust in the central Iraqi city of Najaf.

Sandstorms are a perennial feature of life in central and southern Iraq but the environment ministry has warned the country can expect to suffer a rising number of "dust days" in coming decades due to the impact of global warming.

A heavy in 2022 saw one person die and more than 5,000 treated in hospital for breathing difficulties.

© 2025 AFP

Citation: Iraq sandstorm closes airports, puts 3,700 people in hospital (2025, April 15) retrieved 2 June 2025 from /news/2025-04-iraq-sandstorm-airports-people-hospital.html
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Iraq sandstorm leaves 1,800 people with respiratory problems: Health officials

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