Deadly storm engulfs Middle East, slows Syria air strikes

It has claimed the lives of two people, hundreds hospitalised in Lebanon

September 08, 2015 04:51 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 05:13 am IST - NICOSIA/BEIRUT:

A Lebanese national flag flutters as an yacht sails at the Mediterranean Sea during a sandstorm in Beirut on Tuesday. An unseasonal sandstorm has hit Lebanon and Syria, reducing visibility and sending dozens to hospitals with breathing difficulties.

A Lebanese national flag flutters as an yacht sails at the Mediterranean Sea during a sandstorm in Beirut on Tuesday. An unseasonal sandstorm has hit Lebanon and Syria, reducing visibility and sending dozens to hospitals with breathing difficulties.

A heavy sandstorm swept across parts of the Middle-East on Tuesday, killing two people and hospitalising hundreds in Lebanon and disrupting fighting and air strikes in neighbouring Syria.

Clouds of dust also engulfed Israel, Jordan and Cyprus where aircraft were diverted to Paphos from Larnaca airport as visibility fell to 500 metres.

‘Very rare’

“We have had sandstorms before, but not of this intensity. It is very rare for this time of year too and it is covering the entire region,” a Cypriot metrological office official told Reuters.

There were fewer air strikes in Syria on Monday as the storm engulfed the sky, said Rami Abdulrahman from the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group.

People across the region posted pictures online of huge clouds of billowing dust. Dust storms frequently hit the Middle-East during the summer but usually concentrate on Iraq and Gulf region where clouds of sand are whipped up from arid areas.

Two dead

Lebanon’s Health Ministry said two people had died as a result of the storm and 750 people had been hospitalised with breathing problems.

The Ministry warned people to stay indoors, especially those with health issues, pregnant women and the elderly, and only to venture outside with face masks.

Visibility was reduced to several hundred metres by the sea in Lebanon’s capital Beirut where people moved sluggishly in sweltering humidity and some workers wore surgical masks.

In the northern coastal city of Tripoli, shops and restaurants remained shut in the stifling weather.

Breathing problems

The Red Cross in Lebanon said 130 people had been taken to hospital complaining of breathing problems in the eastern Bekaa Valley and northern district of Akkar on Monday and Tuesday.

Lebanon’s weather department in the civil aviation authority said the storm would continue into Wednesday with humidity between 65 per cent and 85 per cent, state news agency NNA reported.

The dust would begin to dissipate late on Wednesday, it added.

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