58 Iraqis died of electrocution during heavy rains: ministry
The sewer system was overwhelmed by several days of downpour, leading to flooding in Baghdad and other parts
BAGHDAD:
Fifty-eight Iraqis died of electrocution during heavy rains and flooding last week, the health ministry said Thursday, illustrating the dangers posed by the country's dilapidated infrastructure.
The 58 "died of electric shocks," spokesperson Ahmed al-Ridaini told AFP.
Torrential rain wreaks havoc in Iraq
The sewer system was overwhelmed by several days of downpour, leading to widespread flooding in Baghdad and other parts of the country, and with some areas still flooded days after the rain stopped.
The flooding combined with decrepit electricity infrastructure to pose deadly danger, and videos posted online showed the bodies of people purportedly electrocuted being fished out of flooded streets.
As more rain fell Thursday, the electricity ministry issued a warning for citizens to "be careful with the distribution networks that include wires, poles and transformers."
Overdue apology: Blair admits Iraq invasion contributed to rise of Da’ish
Because government-provided power falls far short of demand, many streets in Iraq are criss-crossed by spiderwebs of dozens of haphazardly strung wires linking homes and shops to private generators.
Government electricity provision -- which falls to just a few hours a day during the summer, when temperatures top 50 degrees Celsius -- has been a major source of discontent in Iraq.
Anger over poor services and rampant corruption sparked weeks of protests earlier in the year. Reforms have been announced, but little in the way of significant change has occurred so far.
Fifty-eight Iraqis died of electrocution during heavy rains and flooding last week, the health ministry said Thursday, illustrating the dangers posed by the country's dilapidated infrastructure.
The 58 "died of electric shocks," spokesperson Ahmed al-Ridaini told AFP.
Torrential rain wreaks havoc in Iraq
The sewer system was overwhelmed by several days of downpour, leading to widespread flooding in Baghdad and other parts of the country, and with some areas still flooded days after the rain stopped.
The flooding combined with decrepit electricity infrastructure to pose deadly danger, and videos posted online showed the bodies of people purportedly electrocuted being fished out of flooded streets.
As more rain fell Thursday, the electricity ministry issued a warning for citizens to "be careful with the distribution networks that include wires, poles and transformers."
Overdue apology: Blair admits Iraq invasion contributed to rise of Da’ish
Because government-provided power falls far short of demand, many streets in Iraq are criss-crossed by spiderwebs of dozens of haphazardly strung wires linking homes and shops to private generators.
Government electricity provision -- which falls to just a few hours a day during the summer, when temperatures top 50 degrees Celsius -- has been a major source of discontent in Iraq.
Anger over poor services and rampant corruption sparked weeks of protests earlier in the year. Reforms have been announced, but little in the way of significant change has occurred so far.