Stories of suffocating dust reported to be 66 times above the healthy level shared on Twitter and Facebook

A suffocating dust storm sweeping across western Iran has disrupted life in an unprecedented fashion, closing down schools and government offices, bringing flights to a standstill and provoking protests.

A large group of people in the western city of Ahwaz, the capital of Iran’s oil-rich Khuzestan province, gathered in protest at the government’s handling of the environmental crisis on Tuesday. Protesters demanded the administration of President Hassan Rouhani to act, holding up placards saying that “healthy air is our right”.

Many others took to social networking websites such as Twitter and Facebook, sharing harrowing pictures of how ordinary citizens are grappling with an enormous amount of dust and sand in the air, which are reported to be tens of times above the healthy limit.



“We are breathing dust here, not oxygen,” said one Twitter user. “It is really, really terrifying,” said another. As well as Khuzestan, the dust storm has also hit other western Iranian provinces, such as Ilam, Lorestan, Kurdistan and Kermanshah.



In Khuzestan many are using #KhouzestanCantBreathe on Twitter to bring their problem to the nation’s attention. Others wrote messages on car bonnets and other surfaces covered with dust and posted them online.

Shahriar Askari, an official with Khuzestan’s environmental protection organisation, told the state Irna news agency that the amount of dust in the air on Tuesday was 66 times above the healthy level. Citizens are advised to stay indoors or wear face masks when going outside.

A combination of drought, shrinking wetlands and overall environmental deterioration in neighbouring Iraq and Saudi Arabia are blamed for the situation in western Iran.

