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20 years after deadly quake, Istanbul ill-prepared for ‘Big One’

By - Aug 15,2019 - Last updated at Aug 15,2019

This photo taken on Monday shows old and newly-built buildings near the Bayrampasa district in Istanbul (AFP photo)

ISTANBUL — Twenty years after a devastating earthquake ravaged the northwest of Turkey, Istanbulites live with the knowledge that another “Big One” is unavoidable, and that their city of 16 million is not prepared. 

On Saturday, Turkey will mark the anniversary of the 7.4-magnitude quake that hit Izmit — around 100 kilometres east of Istanbul — on August 17, 1999, killing at least 17,400 people, including 1,000 within the economic capital of the country. 

The question for seismologists is not if another earthquake will hit Istanbul, which lies along the volatile north Anatolian tectonic plate. The only question is when. 

Sukru Ersoy, a specialist at the city’s Yildiz Technical University, estimates it could come within the next decade. 

“In the worst case, the quake could reach a magnitude of 7.7,” he told AFP. “Is Istanbul ready for that? Sadly not.”

According to him, such a quake would destroy thousands of buildings, leaving a “terrifying” number of dead and paralysing Turkey’s economic and tourist hub. 

The former capital of the Ottoman Empire has suffered many earthquakes through its long history. In 1509, the city was shaken so badly that the Ottoman authorities referred to the incident as “the little apocalypse”. 

Since then, a rapid-response unit — the Disaster and emergency management authority — has been created, quake-proof hospitals have been built, and systems to cut gas lines installed. 

But experts say the main problem is that Istanbul has tens of thousands of poorly-built buildings, thrown up during the construction boom of recent decades with little regulatory oversight. 

The 1999 quake showed how many buildings had been built using dodgy cement made from unsuitable sand dredged from the sea. 

“There was a moment of reflection just after the 1999 earthquake,” said Nusret Suna, head of the Chamber of Building Engineers for Istanbul. “But with time, fatalism took over again. People said ‘It’s destiny’ and people moved on to other things.”

Although regulations have become stricter in the past 20 years, the collapse of a residential building in Istanbul this February, in which 20 people were killed, renewed fears about the solidity of the city’s infrastructure. 

There have been efforts to rebuild “at-risk” buildings in sturdier fashion, but Suna said a much bigger mobilisation is needed to reach basic levels of earthquake-proofing. 

The new mayor of Istanbul, Ekrem Imamoglu, has vowed to fast-track a plan, including efforts to provide more green spaces — notoriously lacking in the city — that can be used to gather survivors. 

In theory, each neighbourhood is supposed to have an assembly point for this purpose, but many have been lost under new parkings and shopping centres. 

Without rapid changes, Istanbul risks being plunged into “real chaos” by a serious quake, warned Recep Salci, head of the non-government search and rescue association, which was a key first-responder in 1999. 

“We cannot prevent an earthquake, but we can enormously reduce its consequences,” he said, citing the examples of Japan and Chile, which are similarly vulnerable but have taken radical measures to brace themselves.

Suna, at the chamber of engineers, said it would take 15 to 20 years to fully prepare Istanbul. 

“Since 1999, 20 years have been lost. But we must not be discouraged from the task.”

Israel to bar visit by two US congresswomen

By - Aug 15,2019 - Last updated at Aug 15,2019

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — Israel said on Thursday it will bar a planned visit by two US congresswomen who have supported a boycott of the country over its treatment of Palestinians, a decision in line with President Donald Trump’s urgings.

Israel’s interior ministry announced the decision against Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib, and said it was in accordance with a law banning entry to foreigners who support boycotting the country.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu alleged their itinerary showed they intended to seek to strengthen the boycott against Israel.

“As a vibrant and free democracy, Israel is open to any critic and criticism, with one exception,” Netanyahu said in a statement.

“Israel’s law prohibits the entry of people who call and act to boycott Israel, as is the case with other democracies that prevent the entry of people whom they see as harming the country.”

Omar and Tlaib, who is of Palestinian origin, were expected to arrive in Israel at the weekend for a visit that would take them to the Palestinian territories.

Israeli officials said they would consider a separate humanitarian request from Tlaib to visit family members.

Israel announced its decision shortly after Trump called on the country to bar the Democratic congresswomen who are among his sharpest critics.

“It would show great weakness if Israel allowed Rep. Omar and Rep. Tlaib to visit,” Trump wrote on Twitter.

Senior Palestinian official Hanan Ashrawi called Israel’s decision “an outrageous act of hostility against the American people and their representatives”.

“This is a dangerous precedent that defies all diplomatic norms and an assault on the Palestinian people’s right to engage with the rest of the world,” she said in a statement.

Tanker seizures: What we know

By - Aug 15,2019 - Last updated at Aug 15,2019

TEHRAN — A court in Gibraltar is set to decide on Thursday the fate of a tanker carrying Iranian oil seized off the British territory in an operation involving royal marines.

The seizure is one of several in recent weeks that have ratcheted up tensions between Iran and its foe the United States and its allies.

Here’s what we know about the vessels involved:

 

Grace 1 

 

Gibraltar police and customs officers aided by British royal marines intercepted the Grace 1 supertanker on July 4, as it passed through the strait between the territory on Spain’s southern tip and north Africa.

Officials in Gibraltar and the United States suspect the 330 metre Panama-flagged ship was destined for Syria, in breach of separate sets of EU and US sanctions.

The Indian captain of the vessel, which was carrying 2.1 million barrels of oil, later told the BBC a military helicopter landed on its deck before the royal marines boarded.

Iran has called the seizure of the tanker “maritime piracy” and warned at the time that it would not let its detention go unanswered.

The Islamic republic has not officially disclosed the tanker’s destination but it has repeatedly denied it was headed for Syria.

Gibraltar’s supreme court announced on July 19 that it was extending the tanker’s detention for 30 days.

 

MT Riah 

 

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said its forces detained a “foreign tanker” in Gulf waters on July 14 for allegedly smuggling contraband fuel.

The tanker was seized south of the Iranian island of Larak in the strategic Strait of Hormuz, the guard’ official website said.

“With a capacity of 2 million litres and 12 foreign crew on board, the vessel was en route to deliver contraband fuel received from Iranian boats to foreign ships,” it said.

TankerTrackers reported at the time that the Panamanian-flagged MT Riah, used in the strait for fuelling other vessels, had crossed into Iranian waters, and at that point its automatic identification system stopped sending signals.

Stena Impero 

 

Revolutionary guard surrounded the British-flagged Stena Impero with attack boats before rappelling onto the deck of the oil tanker in the Strait of Hormuz on July 19.

The 183 metre ship is impounded at the Iranian port of Bandar Abbas for breaking “international maritime rules” — by allegedly failing to respond to distress calls and turning off its transponder after hitting a fishing boat.

Eighteen of the Swedish-owned tanker’s 23 crew are Indian, and the rest are from the Philippines, Latvia, and Russia.

The seizure came hours after a Gibraltar court said it would extend the detention of the Grace 1.

Britain quickly called on Iran to release the Stena Impero, saying it was seized illegally in an “utterly unacceptable” gambit.

But Tehran said the seizure was a legal measure and further investigations were required, denying it was a tit-for-tat move as London suggested.

Iran and Britain have both so far ruled out the possibility of an oil tanker swap deal.

 

Unknown vessel 

 

Iran seized another ship on July 31 with seven foreign crew onboard, claiming it was smuggling around 700,000 litres of fuel.

The guard said the ship was transferred to Bushehr province and handed over to authorities, noting the vessel was en route to deliver fuel to Gulf Arab states.

The vessel’s identity and the nationality of its crew were not revealed at the time of its seizure.

Yemen gov't rules out talks until separatists withdraw from Aden

By - Aug 14,2019 - Last updated at Aug 14,2019

Southern separatists patrol a street during clashes with government forces in Aden, Yemen (Photo courtesy of EPA)

DUBAI — Yemen's government on Wednesday ruled out talks with southern separatists until they withdraw from positions they seized last week in second city Aden. 

The fighting saw forces that back the Southern Transitional Council (STC) take five barracks, the presidential palace and the prime minister's office.

The fighting sparked tensions within a Saudi-led coalition that backs the government against northern-based Houthi rebels.

A key member of the coalition, the United Arab Emirates, trained the force that led the Aden offensive.

Saudi Arabia has proposed peace talks in Riyadh, a call supported by the UAE. 

Yemen's Washington embassy, quoting the foreign ministry, on Wednesday welcomed the Saudi initiative to address the "coup" in Aden.

But, it said in a Tweet, separatists "must first commit to total withdrawal from areas forcibly seized by STC in past few days before start of any talks".

The STC has voiced willingness to take part in the talks, but has not given any sign that it is ready to withdraw, say security sources close to the movement.

South Yemen was an independent country until it merged with the north in 1990. 

An armed secession bid four years later ended with its occupation by northern forces, provoking resentments that still persist.

The deadly fighting in Aden has further complicated Yemen’s devastating conflict, which has killed tens of thousands of people and contributed what the UN calls the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

The Saudi-led coalition intervened in 2015 to prop up the government of President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi after the Houthis ousted it from the capital Sanaa.

But last week’s clashes saw the UAE-trained Security Belt Force seize Aden — the government’s interim capital — potentially further destabilising the country’s south.

The fighting left 40 dead and 260 wounded, according to the UN. 

Hadi himself has long been absent from Yemen, having fled to Riyadh as the Houthis advanced on Sanaa. 

The Iran-backed rebels continue to control vast swathes of the country including the capital and areas close to the Saudi border.

Analysts say the tensions may weaken the coalition’s military campaign against the Houthis. 

Muslim pilgrims pray in Mecca as Hajj winds down without incident

By - Aug 14,2019 - Last updated at Aug 14,2019

Muslim pilgrims perform the final walk around the Kaaba (Tawaf Al Wadaa), Islam's holiest shrine, at the Grand Mosque in Saudi Arabia's holy city of Mecca on Tuesday (AFP photo)

MINA, Saudi Arabia — Millions of Hajj pilgrims began heading back to Mecca for final prayers on Tuesday as the world’s largest annual gathering of Muslims wound down without incident despite the logistical challenges and escalating regional tensions.

Senior officials said there had been no major incidents and the logistical, security and health plans had been successful, even with some heavy rainfall.

Saudi Arabia stakes its reputation on its guardianship of Islam’s holiest sites, Mecca and Medina, and its organisation of the pilgrimage. It hopes to continue expanding attendance to help to build its tourism industry.

Pilgrims participated in a symbolic stoning of the devil, part of the Hajj rituals, in Jamarat before returning to Mecca, where the Grand Mosque filled with worshippers preparing to depart.

Saudi pilgrim Jasem Ali Haqawi said he was grateful to the authorities for a well-run week of rituals.

“Nobody comes to the Hajj without things inside him that he wants to ask from God,” he said while preparing to conduct final prayers in Mecca. “The sick, the indebted ... such things only God can grant and so you ask God for whatever you want.”

Nearly 2.5 million pilgrims, most of them from abroad, came for the five-day ritual this year. Attendance is a religious duty, once in a lifetime, for every able-bodied Muslim who can afford it.

More than 120,000 members of the security forces and more than 30,000 health workers were on hand this week to maintain safety and provide first aid.

A crush in 2015 killed nearly 800 pilgrims, according to Riyadh, when two large groups of pilgrims arrived at a crossroads east of Mecca. Counts by countries of repatriated bodies showed that 2,000-plus people may have died, including more than 400 Iranians.

Saudi authorities said at the time that the crush may have been caused by pilgrims failing to follow crowd control rules. King Salman ordered an investigation but the results were never announced.

Iran boycotted the Hajj the following year, partly in response to the crush and a diplomatic rift between the two countries.

Iranians attended this year as Riyadh and Tehran continue to struggle for regional supremacy. Tensions are particularly high after the seizure of commercial vessels and attacks on tankers near the Strait of Hormuz.

The narrow waterway separating the two countries has become the focus of a stand-off between Tehran and Washington, which has beefed up its military presence in the Gulf since May.

 

Regime forces advance towards key town in northwest Syria

By - Aug 14,2019 - Last updated at Aug 14,2019

Syrian families from the southeastern Idlib province and the northern countryside of Hama fleeing battles with trucks loaded with their belongings, drive past a flock of sheep on the highway, near Maaret Al Numan in the southern Idlib province, on Wednesday (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — Regime fighters pushed further into an extremist-run bastion in northwest Syria on Wednesday, inching towards a key town after months of bombardment, a monitor said.

Eight years into Syria's civil war, the extremist-run region of Idlib is the last major stronghold of opposition to President Bashar Assad's regime.

In the south of the stronghold, almost all residents of Khan Sheikhoun — which lies on a key highway coveted by the government — have left the town.

The road in question runs through Idlib, connecting government-held Damascus with the northern city of Aleppo, which was retaken by loyalists in December 2016.

After a week of ground advances, Assad's fighters were just a few kilometres away from the town on Wednesday, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

"Regime forces are now four kilometres from Khan Sheikhoun to the west, with nothing between them and it but fields," observatory chief Rami Abdel Rahman said.

To the east, pro-Assad fighters are battling to control a hill just six kilometres from the town, the head of the Britain-based observatory said.

Clashes on Wednesday have killed 14 regime forces, as well as 20 extremists, he said.

State news agency SANA on Wednesday said army troops had taken several villages from the extremists in the area west of Khan Sheikhoun.

AFP correspondents have reported seeing dozens of families flee fighting over the past few days, heading north in trucks piled high with belongings.

A buffer zone deal brokered by Russia and Turkey last year was supposed to protect the Idlib region’s three million inhabitants from an all-out regime offensive, but it was never fully implemented.

An alliance led by fighters from Syria’s former Al Qaeda affiliate — Hayat Tahrir Al Sham — took over full control of the anti-Assad stronghold in May.

Humanitarian workers have warned that any fully-blown ground attack on Idlib would cause one of the worst humanitarian disasters of Syria’s war.

The Syrian conflict has killed more than 370,000 people and displaced millions at home and abroad since starting in 2011.

Iraq rejects Israeli role in Gulf flotilla

By - Aug 14,2019 - Last updated at Aug 14,2019

BAGHDAD — Iraq rejects any Israeli participation in a naval force to protect shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, at the heart of tensions with Iran, Foreign Minister Mohammed Ali Al Hakim said Monday.

Tensions have escalated in past months, with drones downed and tankers mysteriously attacked in Gulf and nearby waters.

Washington and its Arab allies in the Gulf have accused the Islamic republic of carrying out the tanker attacks, which Tehran denies.

The US has since sought to assemble an international coalition it says is to guarantee freedom of navigation in the Gulf.

Israel has made no official announcement on the operation.

Iraq "rejects any participation of forces of the Zionist entity in any military force to secure passage of ships in the Arabian Gulf", Hakim said on Twitter.

"Together, the Gulf states can secure the passage of ships," he said. 

He added that “Iraq will work to lower tensions in our region through calm negotiations”, while “the presence of Western forces in the region would raise tensions”. 

Tehran and Washington have been at loggerheads since President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew the US from a nuclear accord between Iran and world powers in May 2018, reimposing biting sanctions.

If the coalition is formed, each country would provide a military escort for its commercial ships through the Gulf with the support of the US military, which would carry out aerial surveillance and command operations.

Britain has said it will take part, but other European countries have so far kept out, fearing it might harm efforts to reach a negotiated settlement with Iran.

On Thursday, Iran’s Defence Minister Amir Hatami said the formation of a US-led flotilla in the Gulf would “increase insecurity” and any Israeli involvement could have “disastrous consequences” for the region.

 

Iran says Britain might release oil tanker soon

By - Aug 14,2019 - Last updated at Aug 14,2019

DUBAI/LONDON — The British territory of Gibraltar will not yet release an Iranian oil tanker seized by Royal Marines in the Mediterranean despite an Iranian report that it could do so on Tuesday, an official Gibraltar source said.

The commandeering of the Grace 1 on July 4 exacerbated frictions between Tehran and the West and led to retaliatory moves in Gulf waterways used to ship oil.

Britain accused the vessel of violating European sanctions by taking oil to Syria, a charge Tehran denies.

The deputy head of Iran’s Ports and Maritime Organisation, Jalil Eslami, said on Tuesday that Britain was thinking of freeing the Grace 1 following an exchange of documents.

“The vessel was seized based on false allegations,” Eslami said in comments reported by state news agency IRNA. “We hope the release will take place soon.”

Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency, quoting unidentified Gibraltar authorities, said the tanker would be freed by Tuesday evening.

However, a senior source in the government of British overseas territory denied that would happen on Tuesday.

Although Grace 1 was seized by British forces, Britain said on Tuesday that investigations into the tanker Grace were a matter for Gibraltar. The territory has denied Iran’s claim that the action was taken on the orders of Tehran’s longtime foe Washington.

“As this is an ongoing investigation, we are unable to comment further,” a British foreign office spokesman said.

Tehran has denied the vessel was doing anything improper and in retaliation Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps troops seized the British-flagged Stena Impero tanker in the Strait of Hormuz on July 19 for alleged marine violations.

The Gulf tanker crisis has added to worsening hostilities since Washington pulled out of Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal with six powers, under which Tehran agreed to curb its nuclear work in return for lifting most international sanctions on Tehran.

The Iranian capture of the Stena Impero drew condemnation from Britain and other European parties to the nuclear deal that have been trying to salvage it by shielding Iran’s economy from reimposed and toughened US sanctions.

Unlike the seized Iranian tanker, which was carrying a cargo of up to 2.1 million barrels of oil, the Stena Impero was on its way to the Gulf and empty at the time it was seized by Iranian forces.

Millions of barrels of oil pass daily through the various bottlenecks from Middle East oil producers to markets across the globe.

South Yemen: Separatism strong in ex-independent state

By - Aug 14,2019 - Last updated at Aug 14,2019

A fighter of the Security Belt Force, dominated by backers of the the Southern Transitional Council which seeks independence for south Yemen, mans the pickup truck mounted with an anti-aircraft gun in the centre of Yemen’s second city of Aden, on Monday (AFP photo)

ADEN — South Yemen, where separatists have captured Aden’s presidential palace after deadly clashes with pro-government forces, was an independent state before its merger with the North in 1990.

Here is some background.

 

Independent for 23 years 

 

South Yemen became an independent country in 1967 after a bitter, four-year liberation war with its British colonisers.

Britain had occupied the area around the key port of Aden since 1839, using it to protect and refuel ships heading to and from India.

The new People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen was socialist and under the influence of the Soviet Union.

North Yemen had been an independent state — first a kingdom, then a republic — since the collapse of the Ottoman Empire in 1918.

Relations between the Saudi-backed North and the South were often tense, sparking wars first in 1972 then in 1979.

They moved towards unity in the 1980s, officially merging on May 22, 1990 to form the Republic of Yemen with the city of Sanaa, north of Aden, as the capital.

The separatist movement in the south sparked several weeks of civil war in 1994 but it was crushed by northern Yemeni forces. 

 

Two-thirds of Yemen 

 

The former South Yemen accounts for two-thirds of the unified country, covering the eastern regions and sharing a border with Oman. Saudi Arabia is to the north.

Despite its size, it is home to only a fifth of Yemen’s total population of around 28 million.

Its main sources of revenue are agriculture and fisheries.

 

Aden, temporary capital 

 

Aden was capital of the independent South and has been Yemen’s temporary capital since Houthi rebels forced President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi to flee Sanaa in 2015.

Located on the Gulf of Aden some 380 kilometres south of Sanaa, is the second largest city in Yemen.

With a history dating back to antiquity, it was a prosperous trading post under British rule.

When Marxists took power after the departure of the British in 1967, the city maintained its liberal traditions, unlike the more austere north.

The Houthis launched their rebellion in 2014, seizing the presidential palace just months later and forcing President Mansour Hadi to relocate his government in Aden.

 

Southern separatists 

 

Since reunification, residents of the south have complained of discrimination by northern-dominated authorities.

In 2007-2008 thousands of people demonstrated in southern towns, giving birth to the Southern Movement which calls for autonomy or secession.

In 2017, tensions rose again between separatists and the government after Aden governor Aidarous al-Zoubeidi was sacked by the president. 

Zoubeidi formed a Southern Transitional Council, a separatist-dominated parallel authority.

In late January 2018, separatist forces seized almost all of Aden in three days of clashes in which 38 people were killed. 

Last week, new clashes in Aden pitted loyalist troops against separatists who on August 10 seized the city’s presidential palace.

The separatists are backed by Abu Dhabi — despite the United Arab Emirates being a key part of a Saudi-led coalition backing the government against the Houthis.

 

Extremists 

 

Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula has exploited years of chaos to establish itself in southern Yemen.

Its first known attack in 1992 targeted a hotel in Aden used by American soldiers heading to Somalia. 

In 2000, 17 American soldiers were killed in a suicide attack on the destroyer USS Cole in Aden’s port.

The Daesh group has also extended its operations in the south, attacking symbols of the state, including in Aden.

The ‘gift’ of Tunisia’s delicate date palm drink

By - Aug 14,2019 - Last updated at Aug 14,2019

A customer buys bottles of legmi from a street vendor, a coveted date palm drink, in the south-western Tunisian town of Gabes, on July 18 (AFP photo)

GABES, Tunisia — As soon as the sun is up, people in southern Tunisia rush out to buy a glass or bottle of legmi, a coveted date palm drink that is too delicate to be sold far from the oasis.

At 7:00am, at the busy Ain Slam roundabout in the centre of the coastal city of Gabes, bicycles, cars and military vehicles are clustered around three men seated on plastic chairs.

Next to them are jugs brimming with the precious juice, a testament to the Gabes saying: “Even if the legmi attracts mosquitos, people will stick around.”

Favoured particularly during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan for its high sugar content, this drink, typical of Saharan oases, is primarily consumed from March to October.

Many Tunisians enjoy legmi for breakfast, such as Akram, who has walked to the roundabout for the morning rush.

“We were born with legmi,” he said.

“My grandfather and my father produced it, my one-and-a-half-year-old daughter has already drunk it, and me, I have even written a song about legmi,” said the singer, in his thirties.

Another customer, Haithem, 30, described the drink as “part of our identity”.

“It’s something rare, it’s a gift,” he said. 

A producer must have an expert hand and not be too greedy to draw the sap from the palm without killing it, he said

 

‘Prince’ of palm tree 

 

At the Ain Slam roundabout, a 1.5-litre bottle sells for around 2.5 dinars ($0.87).

One of the producers is Ridha Omrane Moussa, who describes himself as the “prince of the palm tree”.

Now in his sixties, he has harvested the nectar since learning the technique aged 14 from a relative in the Gabes oasis of Nahal. 

“He who doesn’t love the palm tree is not Gabesian. After God, there is the palm tree,” he said.

Perched atop an 8 metre palm, cigarette between his lips, Moussa had just finished his harvest for the day. 

To extract a daily take of 15 litres, he climbs the palms barefoot, using nothing but notches he made in their trunks.

He carefully cuts the bark to cause a reaction from the palm that makes its sap rise. 

But “one must not touch the heart of the palm, otherwise it dies”, Moussa warned.

He has 25 palm trees but harvests from each for just two-and-a-half years before letting them rest for four years, producing around 8,000 litres annually. 

 

‘Young people’s game’ 

 

Other than fresh, or “living” legmi, a fermented, alcoholic version of the drink is produced, called “dead” legmi.

Back at the Gabes roundabout, Haithem described the alcoholic drink as “a young people’s game”.

“They don’t have a lot of money to get drunk, so you pay one dinar and get dead legmi... but it’s not good at all.”

In his youth, Haithem and others fermented living legmi for hours in a hut to produce their own alcohol.

“Everyday we tested it. We added herbs, mint... Until today, we don’t know which one was the best because nobody agreed. Those are good memories.”

Along with the harvesting, storing the drink is complex as it turns rapidly into vinegar.

To keep it fresh, bottles of ice are placed in the can that the sap flows into overnight, then the juice is immediately frozen until it’s poured for sale.

This fragile process limits the consumption of legmi. 

“Even in Sfax, there is none,” Haithem said, of the coastal city to the north. 

“It has stayed organic, without any chemicals or ingredients for preservation, nothing.”

Some residents see its fragility and limited reach as a positive.

Haithem said that some were afraid: “If there is a lot of demand, what’s going to happen? They’re going to cut a lot of palms and risk losing the oases.” 

Moussa, the legmi producer, warned that “chemical pollution from factories is a threat to the oases”.

State-owned Tunisian Chemical Group has been processing phosphate in the area since the 1970s and has been blamed for putting the oases at risk.

But for now, the future of legmi producers is assured.

“I taught my son this work so that this tradition stays in Gabes forever,” Moussa said.

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