What's new

Crocodiles turn on humans amid Iran water crisis

sammuel

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Dec 14, 2017
Messages
3,266
Reaction score
2
Country
Israel
Location
Israel
~



Ok , that was too weird to ignore ,

1640704369678.jpeg





Crocodiles turn on humans amid Iran water crisis

Lying on the floor of his modest home, Siahouk was in excruciating pain from the injury to his right hand, the result of a nightmarish encounter. Just two days earlier, on a scorchingly hot August afternoon, the frail 70-year-old shepherd had gone to fetch water from a pond when he was pounced on by a *****, the local name for a mugger crocodile in Iran's Baluchistan region.

_122259132_1-siahoukathishome.jpg





"I didn't see it coming," he remembers of the traumatic event two years ago, with the shock and disbelief still vivid in his eyes.
Siahouk was only able to escape once he "managed to squeeze the plastic [water] bottle in between its jaws", he says, reliving the moment as he rubs his bony face with his wrinkled left hand
The blood loss left Siahouk unconscious for half an hour. He was only found after his flock of sheep returned unaccompanied to his tiny village of Dombak.

A lethal coexistence

Siahouk's account echoes that of many other victims, mostly children. More often than not, emotive headlines about Baluchi kids suffering grisly wounds inundate Iranian media, yet quickly disappear.

In 2016, a nine-year-old called Alireza was swallowed by one such crocodile. And in July 2019, Hawa, 10, lost her right arm in an attack. Collecting water for laundry, she was almost dragged in by the crocodile before she was saved by her companions in a tug of war.


The attacks have come at a time when Iran has been suffering acute water shortages and, consequentially, fast-shrinking natural habitats have seen the gandos' food supplies dry up. The starving animals treat humans approaching their territory either as prey or a menace to their evaporating resources.

Scattered across Iran and the Indian subcontinent, gandos are broad-snouted crocodiles, classed as "vulnerable" by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). Iran has an estimated 400, comprising nearly 5% of the species. Iran's Department of Environment says it is doing its utmost to strike a balance between preserving the gandos and protecting local people.


Despite all the thirst-driven tragedies in recent years, there is little sign of the pledge being put into effect. Traveling alongside River Bahu-Kalat, the gandos' main habitat in Iran, there are hardly any signposts warning about the danger.

In the absence of a calibrated government strategy, volunteers have stepped in to try to save the species by quenching their thirst and satiating their hunger.
In Bahu-Kalat, a village named after the river, up the dirt road from Dombak, I sit down with Malek-Dinar, who has been living with gandos for years.

"I have killed my garden to bank water for these creatures," he says of his land once thriving with bananas, lemons and mangoes.

_122218984_2-malek-walkingtowardriver.jpg

Malek-Dinar feeds gandos in the river near his home because their typical prey has become scarce

The river in the vicinity is home to a number of those crocodiles he regularly feeds with chicken breasts, because "the killer heat has left frogs and their typical prey scarce".

"Come on, come here," Malek-Dinar repeatedly summons the crocodiles, while asking me to keep a safe distance. In the blink of an eye, two show up, waiting to be fed their ration of chicken from the familiar white bucket.


'Who can survive without water?'

Iran's water scarcity is not unique to Baluchistan. Deadly protests erupted in the oil-rich south-western Khuzestan province in July. And in late November, riot police in the central city of Isfahan fired birdshot at protesters gathered in the dried-up bed of the River Zayandeh-Roud.

With global warming already showing its ugly face in Iran, the implications for Baluchistan could be catastrophic when coupled with decades of water mismanagement.

After pulling over in Shir-Mohammad Bazar to shelter from a dust storm I meet women doing laundry in the open.


"There is piping infrastructure but no running water," 35-year-old Malek-Naz tells me. Her husband, Osman, smirks at my question about showers, pointing to the sight of a woman bathing her son in a vessel of salty water next door.

Osman, a father of five, and his cousin, Noushervan, who joins the conversation, make a living transporting petrol to neighbouring Pakistan, where it can be sold for more than at home.

"There are numerous risks," Noushervan admits, albeit in a defiant tone. "But let it be when there is no job." And the risk has been real. In February, Iran's border guards opened fire on a group of "fuel smugglers", killing at least 10.

Such crackdowns are commonplace in the sensitive border area, where successive Iranian administrations have worried about security.


"They are wilfully turning a blind eye to our anguish. Trust me, we are no enemy of the state," Osman says, complaining of what he and many disillusioned Baluchis describe as "systematic neglect" of the community.

Still, to him and a countless more Baluchis, unemployment is far less of a challenge than the water shortages that have turned even gandos - the "blissful" creatures with whom they once peacefully coexisted - against them.

"We don't expect any government handout. We don't expect them to put jobs on a platter for us," says Noushervan. "We Baluchis can survive on loaves of bread in a desert. But water is the essence of life. We won't survive without it, and who does?"


 

Attachments

  • 1640704128164.jpeg
    1640704128164.jpeg
    10.6 KB · Views: 14
  • 1640704227504.jpeg
    1640704227504.jpeg
    3.1 KB · Views: 13
  • 1640704310759.png
    1640704310759.png
    2.7 KB · Views: 13
Why fetch water at a river? Evryone has water in the house. I thought Iran is a developed country?

@Dariush the Great

That said, crocodiles are rare and protected.

Its nonesense BBC news, spreading rubbish as usual.

Crocodile taking on humans lmao what a joke

"Classed as "vulnerable" by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). Iran has an estimated 400, "


There are 400 crocodiles in all of Iran,

They are also kinda small.

Btw, it is a single Balooch village on the Pakistani border that had some injured hands from crocodiles and they make it into a News.

**** Those J3wy paper and Sammuel monkey,

why not report real news like

Iran becoming Middle East`s first 1 Trillion dollar economy in 2021 ?

afsasf.jpg


There are some crocodiles on Balooch minority border region to Pakistan,


But those tiny crocodiles wont ever be a "real" problem.
 
Last edited:
its nonesense BBC news, spreading rubbish as usual.

crocodile taking on humans lmao what a joke

" classed as "vulnerable" by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). Iran has an estimated 400, "


they are 400 crocodiles in all of Iran,

they are also kinda small.

its a single balooch village on the pakistani border that had some injured hands from crocodiles and they make it into a News.

**** Those J3wy paper and Sammuel monkey,

why not report real news like

Iran becoming Middle East`s first 1 Trillion dollar economy in 2021 ?

afsasf.jpg


they are some crocodiles on balooch minority border region to Pakistan,


but those tiny crocodiles wont ever be a "real" problem.


I dont mean the crocs i know this species is harmless.

I wonder is it true that not evry house has running water in Iran?
 
Why fetch water at a river? Evryone has water in the house. I thought Iran is a developed country?

@Dariush the Great

That said, crocodiles are rare and protected.

Majority of the economy is from oil and gas bumped to china which means artificial economy hence the country itself is less deveopled then other places in the region
 
I dont mean the crocs i know this species is harmless.

I wonder is it true that not evry house has running water in Iran?

Iranian cities in general are much more developed then Greek cities, i know athens and the rest, they are like iranian cities of the 80`s in terms of development and infrastructure.

the village in the article is ethnic balooch on border to paksitan.

im honest those balooch villages and towns are less developed because the government punishes them for separatism.

till some balooch communities not get rid of their separatism the gov wont invest in them.

kinda similar policy turkey did and is doing with some separatist kurdish strongholds. " we wont invest in you guys, you are against the state anyway "

in my idea its a wrong policy though, will increase separatism.
 
Iranian cities in general are much more developed then Greek cities, i know athens and the rest, they are like iranian cities of the 80`s in terms of development and infrastructure.

the village in the article is ethnic balooch on border to paksitan.

im honest those balooch villages and towns are less developed because the government punishes them for separatism.

till some balooch communities not get rid of their separatism the gov wont invest in them.

kinda similar policy turkey did and is doing with some separatist kurdish strongholds. " we wont invest in you guys, you are against the state anyway "

in my idea its a wrong policy though, will increase separatism.


Evry house in Greece has running water. Even most remote villages have internet.
 
Majority of the economy is from oil and gas bumped to china which means artificial economy hence the country itself is less deveopled then other places in the region

Apparently you don't seem to be familiar with the subject matter. It's been years since income from crude oil and gas exports no longer represents the majority of Iran's annual budget. Also, the Iranian economy is incomparably more diversified than the other oil exporting nations of the region.
 
Last edited:
Evry house in Greece has running water. Even most remote villages have internet.

True and the other day they were claiming redundantly that they were more developed then Turkmenistan which is even more developed than Europe infras wise..:rofl:

Coming from someone who has been in all 3 places Europe, Iran and Turkmenistan
 
Last edited:
Its nonesense BBC news, spreading rubbish as usual.

Crocodile taking on humans lmao what a joke

"Classed as "vulnerable" by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). Iran has an estimated 400, "


There are 400 crocodiles in all of Iran,

They are also kinda small.

Btw, it is a single Balooch village on the Pakistani border that had some injured hands from crocodiles and they make it into a News.

**** Those J3wy paper and Sammuel monkey,

why not report real news like

Iran becoming Middle East`s first 1 Trillion dollar economy in 2021 ?

afsasf.jpg


There are some crocodiles on Balooch minority border region to Pakistan,


But those tiny crocodiles wont ever be a "real" problem.

I wouldn't feed the troll. Chances are this is the new account of "Markus S" aka "Tiberius".
 
You don't know what you're talking about. It's been years since income from crude oil and gas no longer represent the majority of Iran's annual budget. Also, the Iranian economy is incomparably more diversified than the other oil exporters in the region.

this clowns have no idea what they are talking about LoL

irans gov budget for 2022 is 900 billion dollars almost 1 trillion USD



and around 1/10 of this budget comes from OIL or Gas revenue

"
Revenues from exporting oil, gas and gas condensate are estimated at 3.818 quadrillion rials (about $90.904 billion), 8.5 percent more than the figure in the current year’s budget."


even without single sell of OIL iran would still have the largest budget in the region in 2022


and @Apollo has to be a joke, every House in Iran has water and internet access,

the only ones that are missing those are perhaps some balooch towns and villages on pakistan border who are being punished for separatism,

Greece has no ethnic minority separatist problems and also its not a "Military like" dictatorship. its a Western satellite/puppet state.


Turkmenistan more developed then iran ? give me a break fucking clowns LOL !
 
Last edited:
True and the other day they were claiming redundantly that they were more developed then Turkmenistan which is even more developed than Europe..:rofl:

Coming from someone who has been in all 3 places Europe, Iran and Turkmenistan


Turkmenistan's Human Development Index (HDI) ranking: 111

Iran's Human Development Index (HDI) ranking: 70


The HDI represents one of the more credible approximations of actual development in a society.

Source:
 
We write it as" Ali Raza"

You know i did not write this article - " credit " should go to the writer



Its nonesense BBC news, spreading rubbish as usual.

Crocodile taking on humans lmao what a joke

"Classed as "vulnerable" by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). Iran has an estimated 400, "


There are 400 crocodiles in all of Iran,

They are also kinda small.

Btw, it is a single Balooch village on the Pakistani border that had some injured hands from crocodiles and they make it into a News.

**** Those J3wy paper and Sammuel monkey,

why not report real news like

Iran becoming Middle East`s first 1 Trillion dollar economy in 2021 ?

afsasf.jpg


There are some crocodiles on Balooch minority border region to Pakistan,


But those tiny crocodiles wont ever be a "real" problem.

Chill out .Just thought that headline was too insane to ignore , because I did not even know they had Crocodiles in Iran , thought such issues where reserved to places like Africa,

But what is not a joke is the water crises , which is not just Iran's problem but all of the middle East , more and more we see the desert closing in.


 

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom