Summer comes early for Iraq with 49 degrees Celsius in Basra

A drone view shows a polluted section of the al-Ashar River running through a residential neighborhood in Basra, Iraq, April 29, 2025. (REUTERS)
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Updated 22 May 2025
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Summer comes early for Iraq with 49 degrees Celsius in Basra

  • In Iraq, summer temperatures often exceed 50 degrees Celsius, especially in July and August

BAGHDAD: Summer has come early for Iraq this year with temperatures hitting 49 degrees Celsius (topping 120 degrees Fahrenheit) in the southern city of Basra on Thursday, the national weather center said.

“It is the highest temperature recorded in Iraq this year,” weather center spokesperson Amer Al-Jabiri told AFP.

He said the early heat was in contrast to last year, when the temperature was “relatively good” in May and “it only began to rise in June.”

In Iraq, summer temperatures often exceed 50 degrees Celsius, especially in July and August, and sometimes reach these levels earlier.

On Sunday, two cadets died and others were admitted to hospital with heat stroke at a military academy in the southern province of Dhi Qar, authorities said.

The defense ministry said nine cadets “showed signs of fatigue and exhaustion due to sun exposure” while waiting to be assigned to battalions.

Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani ordered an investigation into the deaths of the two cadets.

Iraq is one of the five countries most impacted by some effects of climate change, according to the United Nations. It has also seen a prolonged drought and frequent dust storms.


Trump asks Netanyahu to change West Bank policy

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Trump asks Netanyahu to change West Bank policy

  • US President, his team raise settler violence, financial instability of PA, Israeli settlements’ expansion

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump and ​his top advisers asked Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to change Israel’s policies in ‌the occupied ‌West ‌Bank during ​their meeting according to a US official and another source, both with direct knowledge, ‌Axios said.
Home ​to 2.7 million Palestinians, the West Bank has long been at the heart of plans for a future Palestinian state alongside Israel. 
According to the US official, the White House thinks a violent escalation in the West Bank would undermine efforts to implement the Gaza peace agreement and prevent the expansion of the Abraham Accords before the end of Trump’s term.
Trump and his team expressed concern about the situation in the West Bank and asked Netanyahu to avoid provocative steps and “calm things down,” the sources said.
The president and his team raised settler violence against Palestinian civilians, the financial instability of the Palestinian Authority, and Israeli settlements expansion, the sources said.
The US message was that changing course in the West Bank is critical to repair Israel’s relations with European countries and, hopefully, expand the Abraham Accords. “Netanyahu spoke very strongly against settler violence and said he is going to take more action,” the source with knowledge said.