Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Ghost City Dubai Begins to Feel Impact of Iran War as Water Crisis Threat Looms

https://www.bitchute.com/video/hSjEWwogI1wA/

https://rumble.com/v76ws88-ghost-city-dubai-begins-to-feel-impact-of-iran-war-as-water-crisis-threat-l.html

🌊 የውሃ ቀውስ ስጋት እየተፈጠረ ሲመጣ የዱባይ ከተማ የኢራን ጦርነት ተጽእኖ ሊሰማት ጀመረ። ለገንዘብ ሲል ወደዚያ ተጉዞ የነበረው ከንቱ ስጋዊ ሰው ሁሉ ባሪያዎቹን እና የቤት እንስሳውን እየተወ ከተማዋን በመልቀቅ ላይ ይገኛል።

ቅዳሜና እሁድ፣ በባህረ ሰላጤው ክልል ውስጥ በሚገኙ የውሃ ጨዋማ ማጣሪያ ፋብሪካዎች ላይ በተሰነዘረው ጥቃት ግጭቱ ተባብሷል። ይህ በጣም ትልቅ ነገር ነው።

🔥መላዋ ዓለምን በማወክ ላይ ያሉት ጦረኞቹ ኤዶማውያን እና እስማኤላውያን የኢራን ጦርነት በከፍተኛ ሁኔታ እየተባባሰ ሲሄድና ሁላቸውንም እየጎዳ በመሆኑ በፍርሃት/በስጋት ተውጠዋል... አሁን ጦርነቱን ለማስቆም እርስ በርስ እየተማጸኑ ነው።

የመቁጠር ቀን... የክርስቶስ ተቃዋሚው የተባበሩት አረብ ኤሚራቶች ጥንታውያኑ ክርስቲያኖችን ለመጨፍጨፍ ዘር አጥፊውን አሸባሪ የፋሺስት ጋላ-ኦሮሞ እስላማዊ አገዛዝን በገንዘብና በድሮኖች እየደገፈች እና እያስታጠቀች ነው...አሁን እራሱ በድሮን እየጠፋች ነው። የምትዘራውን ታጭዳለህ።

የነዳጅ ዘይት የፋርስን ባሕረ ሰላጤ ገንብቷል። የጨዋማ ውሃ በከፊልም ቢሆን 'ሕያው' አድርጎታል። ጦርነት ሁለቱንም (ዘይቱንም ውሃውንም)ሊያጠፋ ይችላል።

🔥 የኢራን ጦርነት እየሰፋ ሲሄድ፣ ባለሙያዎች እንደሚሉት የመካከለኛው ምስራቅ እውነተኛ ስትራቴጂካዊ ድክመት ውሃ እንጂ የነዳጅ ዘይት አይደለም።

ሁሉም ሰው ሳውዲ አረቢያን እና ጎረቤቶቹን እንደ የነዳጅ ሃገር እንደሆነች አድርጎ ያስባል። ግን እኔ የጨው ውሃ መንግሥታት ብዬ እጠራቸዋለሁ። በሰው ሰራሽ የቅሪተ አካል ነዳጅ የተሞሉ የውሃ ልዕለ ኃያላን ናቸው"

የአረቢያ ባሕረ ሰላጤ ክልል በዓለም ላይ ጤናማ ባልሆኑት በጨዋማ ውሃዎች በጣም ጥገኛ ከሆኑት ቦታዎች መካከል አንዱና ዋንኛው ነው። ልዩ ሪፖርቶች እንደሚያመለክቱት ከዓለም አጠቃላይ ጨዋማ ያልሆነ ውሃ አርባ/40 በመቶ ያመርታል።

ሪፖርቱ እንዳመለከተው ከዘጠና/90% በላይ የሚሆነው የባህረ ሰላጤው ጨዋማ ያልሆነ ውሃ ከሃምሳ ስድስት/56 የማጣሪያ ጣቢያዎች ብቻ የሚገኝ ሲሆን “እያንዳንዱ ወሳኝ የማጣሪያ ጣቢያ ለጥፋት ወይም ለወታደራዊ እርምጃ በጣም የተጋለጠ ነው።

 😔 እኔን ሁልጊዜ የሚያስገርመኝ፣ የሚያሳዝነኝ፣ የሚረብሸኝና በእጅጉ የሚያስቆጣኝ ነገር፤ እኛ ኢትዮጵያውያን እግዚአብሔር በሰጠን ውድ ውሃ እና አፈር ላይ ተኝተን እንደ ቆሻሻውና ከሃዲው ግራኝ አብዮት አህመድ ጋላ-ኦሮሞ እስላማዊ አገዛዝ ያሉ ኢትዮጵያ-ጠል ኃይሎች አፈራችንን፣ ውሃችንን፣ ፍራፍሪዎቻችንን፣ በጎቻችንን ብሎም እኅቶቻችንና ወጣቶቻችንን ባጠቃላህ ሃገራችንን ለታሪካዊ የሃገረ ኢትዮጵያ እና እግዚአብሔር አምላኳ ጠላቶች ለአረቦች፣ ቱርኮችና ኢራኖች አስላፈው እየሰጡ መሆናቸው ነው። እነዚህ ቆሻሾች እኮ ሃገር ወዳድና ፈሪሃ እግዚአብሔር ያለው ኢትዮጵያዊ ተነስቶ ሳይውል ሳያድር በእሳት መጠረራረግና የውሃ እና አፈር ኃብታችንን ሙሉ በሙሉ እየተቆጣጠረ እስማኤላውያኑን እና ኤዶማውያኑን ማንበረከክ በተገባው ነበር። ይህ እኮ ግዴታችንና መብታችን ነው!!! 

🔥 Wealthy Individuals Rush to Flee Babylon Dubai

https://axumitethiopia.blogspot.com/2026/03/wealthy-individuals-rush-to-flee.html

https://www.bitchute.com/video/A985fAUnalDf/

https://rumble.com/v76qez8-wealthy-individuals-rush-to-flee-babylon-dubai.html

ገብርኤል 🧕 ማርያም ❖ ኡራኤል ❖ ጊዮርጊስ ❖ ተክለ ሐይማኖት ❖ መርቆርዮስ ❖ ዮሴፍ 😇 መድኃኔ ዓለም

🔥 ሀብታም ግለሰቦች ከባቢሎን ዱባይ ለመሸሽ ይሯሯጣሉ።

🥴 በመጀመሪያ፣ ብዙ የተሻለ አማራጭ ያለው ሰው እንዴት ወደዚህ አስቀያሚ ሲዖላማ በረሃ ሄዶ ለመኖር ይመኛል? አየሩ ቆሻሻ፣ ጤናማ የመጠጥና ፈውስ ውሃ/ጸበል የለም! ቦታው ሳር፣ ዛፍ፣ ፍራፍሬና አታክልት አይበቅልበት፣ አብዛኞቹ ነዋሪዎቹ መጥፎዎች ናቸው ወዘተ።

🔥The Warmonger Edomites & Ishamelites are Panicking as Iran War BACKFIRES HUGELY... Now Begging Each other to Stop The War.

Day of reckoning... Antichrist UAE funded and armed the genocidal fascist Oromo Islamic regime of Ethiopia to massacred ancient Christians....what you sow you reap.

Oil built the Persian Gulf. Desalinated water keeps it alive. War could threaten both

🔥 As the Iran war widens, experts say the Middle East's real strategic weak point may be water — not oil.

Everyone thinks of Saudi Arabia and their neighbors as petrostates. But I call them saltwater kingdoms. They’re human-made fossil-fueled water superpowers,”

The Arabian Gulf region is among the most dependent in the world on desalinated water. Specialized reports indicate that it produces about 40 percent of the world’s total desalinated water.

More than 90% of the Gulf’s desalinated water comes from just 56 plants, the report stated, and “each of these critical plants is extremely vulnerable to sabotage or military action.”

A leaked 2008 U.S. diplomatic cable warned the Saudi capital of Riyadh “would have to evacuate within a week” if either the Jubail desalination plant on the Gulf coast or its pipelines or associated power infrastructure were seriously damaged.

How Targeting Water Changes The Entire Face Of The War

Over the weekend, the conflict was escalated by attacks on water desalination plants in the Gulf region. This is huge.

Over the weekend, airstrikes targeted water desalination plants in Iran and Bahrain, threatening a vital life source in one of the most water-scarce regions in the world. Analysts said that this development was not only a “serious escalation” in the Iran war, but also an indication that the conflict could have a wider civilian impact.

Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, called a Saturday attack on a desalination plant on Iran’s Qeshm Island “a dangerous move with grave consequences” on social media and accused the U.S. of setting a precedent. Capt. Tim Hawkins, a spokesman for the U.S. Central Command, has since denied that the U.S. was behind the attack.

One day later, Bahrain’s interior ministry alleged that an Iranian drone caused material damage to a desalination plant in the Persian Gulf island nation, accusing Iran of “indiscriminately” attacking civilian targets. Bahrain’s water and electricity authority said there had been “no impact on water supplies or water network capacity.”

While there has been no immediate response from Iran about Bahrain’s allegation, Iranian officials have stated that their attacks on close U.S. allies in the Gulf are a direct response to the American-Israeli attacks in Iran. They have also stated that the attacks are aimed at American military bases and U.S. soldiers, not civilians.

It was not immediately clear whether either plant was still functioning. Political experts have long warned about the plants’ vulnerability as military targets.

Desalination plants are used to convert seawater into water for drinking, irrigation and industrial purposes. In an area where potable water is scarce, the plants have become vital to life in the Gulf region.

According to a 2020 report by the Gulf Research Center, groundwater, with desalinated water, accounts for around 90 percent of the region’s main water resources. And with groundwater fast deteriorating due to climate change, Gulf countries have come to rely more heavily on desalinated water.

About 42% of the UAE’s drinking water comes from desalination plants, compared to 90% in Kuwait, 86% in Oman, 70% in Saudi Arabia and about 80% in Israel.

If the attacks on desalination plants in Gulf countries continue, the situation could very quickly devolve into a “massive humanitarian catastrophe for the people living in the Gulf,” according to Annelle Sheline, a research fellow in the Quincy Institute’s Middle East Program.

These attacks come after a leaked 2008 diplomatic cable sent from the U.S. Embassy in Riyadh warned that the Saudi capital relied on a singular desalination plant for more than 90 percent of its drinking water. Since then, the Saudi government has expanded their water storage, however, the region’s cities have also continued to grow, placing an undue burden on the water ecosystems that support them.

With this in mind, water desalination plants in the region remain essential for the region and represent a vulnerable military target. Sheline said she wouldn’t be surprised if more facilities were attacked in the future, despite international humanitarian law prohibiting the targeting of civilian infrastructure that is crucial to the survival of the population, which includes drinking water plants.

Laws of war dictate that a military target is a legitimate target, and a civilian target is not legitimate. Targeting, whether it's oil infrastructure or water infrastructure, those are war crimes and violations of international law,” Sheline told RS.

These attacks could mark a major turning point in the war, escalating existing tensions and indicating a new willingness to harm civilians in an already deadly conflict.

🌊 Key Concerns with Desalinated Water:

  • Lack of Minerals: The distillation or reverse osmosis process removes necessary minerals (calcium, magnesium). Without post-treatment to add these back, this "soft" water can cause health issues over time.

  • Chemical Contamination: Residual chemicals used in the process, such as chlorine, copper, or anti-scalants, can enter the final drinking water.

  • Digestive Issues: Some users report discomfort or digestive issues when consuming desalinated water, often attributed to the lack of minerals or residual chemicals.

  • Environmental Impact: The process generates a high-salt byproduct (brine) that, when returned to the ocean, creates oxygen-depleted dead zones, harming marine life.

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ETHIOPIA: Two Islamic Oromo Attacks Kill Nearly 30 Orthodox Christians

https://www.bitchute.com/video/fapub3VUR2wh/ https://rumble.com/v76x61u-ethiopia-two-islamic-oromo-attacks-kill-nearly-30-orthodox-christia...