An unseasonal sandstorm swept across the
Mideast on Tuesday, blanketing Beirut and Damascus, causing the deaths
of at least five people and sending hundreds of others to hospitals with
breathing difficulties, officials said.
Reduced
visibility prompted the Syrian government to call off airstrikes
against rebel fighters, local media reported, and threatened planned
protests by Lebanese activists over the government’s inability to deal
with the country’s rampant trash crisis.
The storm also hit Jordan, Israel and Egypt. In Jordan, schools shut down or cut their days short.
Syria’s
state-run news agency SANA said three people in the central Hama
province died from the sandstorm, without elaborating, and said there
were more than 3,500 cases of people with breathing difficulties across
several provinces.
The sandstorm
reached Beirut on Tuesday, a day after it engulfed eastern Lebanon’s
Bekaa Valley. People, especially those with health issues, were advised
to stay indoors while many of those who ventured onto the streets donned
surgical masks.
The Lebanese Health
Ministry said 750 people suffered breathing problems across the country,
and that two women died because of the sandstorm, without providing
details. Two boats set adrift were rescued by coast guard, the National
News Agency said. Airport officials reported some flight delays.
Lebanese
authorities warned residents against burning trash that has piled up on
Beirut streets this summer, sparking a political crisis and daily
protests.
Lucien Bourjeili, one of the
protest organizers, said the bad weather may prevent some people from
taking to the streets in a major protest planned Wednesday, though “this
movement doesn’t depend on the weather ... or one day.”
In
the Syrian capital, Damascus, the head of a major hospital, Adeeb
Mahmoud, said over 1,200 people, including 100 children, had been
treated for breathing problems since the night before.
“It
is unbelievable. This must be some test,” said Mansour, a Damascus
resident, who gave only his first name. “It’s hot. Temperatures are high
and above that we have this dusty weather! It is something beyond
reasonable. Enough please!”
The Syrian
pro-government Al-Watan newspaper said the weather forced a halt in
government airstrikes against rebel fighters north of the central
province of Hama.
The Britain-based
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an activist group, said hospitals
in the town of al-Mayadeen in the northern province of Deir el-Zour ran
out of oxygen cylinders and were unable to take in more patients.
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