-
Heart attack ends iconic French prop Atonio's career
-
SKorean chip giant SK hynix posts record operating profit for 2025
-
Greenland's elite dogsled unit patrols desolate, icy Arctic
-
Dutch tech giant ASML posts bumper profits, cuts jobs
-
Musetti rues 'really painful' retirement after schooling Djokovic
-
Russian volcano puts on display in latest eruption
-
Thailand uses contraceptive vaccine to limit wild elephant births
-
Djokovic gets lucky to join Pegula, Rybakina in Melbourne semi-finals
-
Trump says to 'de-escalate' Minneapolis, as aide questions agents' 'protocol'
-
'Extremely lucky' Djokovic into Melbourne semi-finals as Musetti retires
-
'Animals in a zoo': Players back Gauff call for more privacy
-
Starmer heads to China to defend 'pragmatic' partnership
-
Uganda's Quidditch players with global dreams
-
'Hard to survive': Kyiv's elderly shiver after Russian attacks on power and heat
-
South Korea's ex-first lady jailed for 20 months for taking bribes
-
Polish migrants return home to a changed country
-
Dutch tech giant ASML posts bumper profits, eyes bright AI future
-
South Korea's ex-first lady jailed for 20 months for corruption
-
Minnesota congresswoman unbowed after attacked with liquid
-
Backlash as Australia kills dingoes after backpacker death
-
Brazil declares acai a national fruit to ward off 'biopiracy'
-
Anisimova 'loses her mind' after Melbourne quarter-final exit
-
Home hope Goggia on medal mission at Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics
-
Omar attacked in Minneapolis after Trump vows to 'de-escalate'
-
Pistons escape Nuggets rally, Thunder roll Pelicans
-
Dominant Pegula sets up Australian Open semi-final against Rybakina
-
'Animals in a zoo': Swiatek backs Gauff call for more privacy
-
Japan PM's tax giveaway roils markets and worries voters
-
Amid Ukraine war fallout, fearful Chechen women seek escape route
-
Rybakina surges into Melbourne semis as Djokovic takes centre stage
-
Dollar struggles to recover from losses after Trump comments
-
Greenland blues to Delhi red carpet: EU finds solace in India
-
Will the EU ban social media for children in 2026?
-
Netherlands faces 'test case' climate verdict over Caribbean island
-
Rybakina stuns Swiatek to reach Australian Open semi-finals
-
US ouster of Maduro nightmare scenario for Kim: N. Korean ex-diplomat
-
Svitolina credits mental health break for reaching Melbourne semis
-
Japan's Olympic ice icons inspire new skating generation
-
Safe nowhere: massacre at Mexico football field sows despair
-
North Korea to soon unveil 'next-stage' nuclear plans, Kim says
-
French ex-senator found guilty of drugging lawmaker
-
US Fed set to pause rate cuts as it defies Trump pressure
-
Sleeping with one eye open: Venezuelans reel from US strikes
-
Venezuela's acting president says US unfreezing sanctioned funds
-
KPop Demon Hunters star to open Women's Asian Cup
-
Trump warns of 'bad things' if Republicans lose midterms
-
Russian strikes in Ukraine kill 12, target passenger train
-
With Maduro gone, Venezuelan opposition figure gets back to work
-
Celebrities call for action against US immigration raids
-
Rubio to warn Venezuela leader of Maduro's fate if defiant
Iran arrests several after protests at drying lake
Iranian police have arrested several people for disturbing security after they protested the drying up of a lake once regarded as the Middle East's largest, official media said Sunday.
Lake Urmia, in the mountains of northwest Iran, began shrinking in 1995 due to a combination of prolonged drought, and the extraction of water for farming and dams, according to the UN Environment Programme.
Urmia, one of the largest "hypersaline" -- or super salty -- lakes in the world, is located between the cities of Tabriz and Urmia, with more than six million people dependent on agriculture around its shores.
On Sunday, Rahim Jahanbakhsh, the police chief of Iran's West Azerbaijan province, reported the arrests.
He described the suspects as "many evil and hostile elements, who had no other objective than to destroy public property and disturb the security of the population," according to state news agency IRNA.
On Saturday, the Fars news agency reported that "dozens of people in the cities of Naghadeh and Urmia had protested against the authorities' lack of attention to the drying up of Lake Urmia".
Fars said protesters had shouted slogans in the provincial capital of Urmia warning the lake was shrinking.
"Lake Urmia is dying, parliament orders its killing", some shouted, Fars reported, with others calling out that "Lake Urmia is thirsty".
Largely arid Iran, like other nearby countries, has suffered chronic dry spells and heat waves for years, which are expected to worsen with the impacts of climate change.
In the last few months, thousands of people have demonstrated against the drying up of rivers, particularly in central and southwestern Iran.
Lake Urmia is an important ecosystems, a key stopping point for migratory birds, and home to an endemic shrimp as well as other underwater species.
S.Keller--BTB