Turkish strikes blamed for oil spill in northeast Syria river

This picture taken on January 31, 2024 shows an aerial view of an oil spill in a stream in the countryside of Qamishli in Syria's northeastern provice of al-Hasakah. (Photo by DELIL SOULEIMAN / AFP)

Farmer Nizar al-Awwad has ceased irrigating his land in northeast Syria due to contamination from an oil spill in a local river, which residents and officials in the Kurdish-held region attribute to strikes by Turkish forces.

“All the farmers in the area have stopped using the river for irrigation,” said Awwad, 30, from a village near Tal Brak, in Hasakeh province.

“We’d be killing our land with our own hands if we used the polluted water,” he said.

“Farmers already suffer from a lack of fuel and drought — the polluted river has only added to our woes,” Awwad added, standing near his wheat crops.

Oil pollution has been a growing concern in Syria since the 2011 onset of civil war, which has taken a toll on infrastructure and seen rival powers compete over the control of energy resources.

Hasakeh province residents told AFP they noticed the oil slicks in the waterway, which feeds into the area’s lifeline Khabour River, after Turkey bombed Kurdish-affiliated oil facilities, including stations and refineries, last month.

The spill has heaped more misery on farmers already struggling to make ends meet after 12 years of war, the growing effects of climate change and a grueling economic crisis that has triggered long power cuts and fuel shortages.

Turkey said it hit dozens of targets in northern Syria and Iraq belonging to the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) and the People’s Protection Units (YPG) after nine Turkish soldiers were killed in clashes with suspected Kurdish fighters in Iraq.

Mohammed al-Aswad, who co-chairs the semi-autonomous Kurdish administration’s water authority, said “Turkish bombardment” in northeast Syria “damaged oil installations and pipelines” and caused the pollution.

Rudimentary traps set up by the administration have failed to limit the current spill.

While repairs to oil infrastructure were expected, authorities were advising farmers against letting livestock drink the polluted water, which could “threaten marine life and biodiversity” if it reached a dam along the Khabour river, Aswad said.

But farmer Ibrahim al-Mufdi, 50, said he had already stopped irrigating his crops with the river before the warning.

“The sheep can’t be drinking from the river,” he said, expressing concern over possible fish contamination.

“I just hope that the rain will keep falling so we don’t have to irrigate from the river,” Mufdi said.