A rare armed confrontation across the border took place on May 27 between Iranian border guards and Taliban fighters, ultimately killing at least two on the Iranian side, and one on the Afghan. The immediate cause of the fighting is unclear, with both sides blaming each other. But the two neighbours have had recent disagreements over water rights, with Iran’s Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi accusing Afghanistan of restricting the water flow of the Helmand River, which usually supplies Iran’s eastern regions. Why is that so important? Well, Iran has been going through a bad drought over the past decade, while Afghanistan is trying to dam the river, to generate electricity and provide water for agriculture. Both sides have tried to calm things down since the border incident, but the underlying issue has not gone away — and offers yet more evidence of how water is at the root of more and more disputes between neighbouring countries in the region — think Turkey and Iraq, Israel and Jordan, and Egypt and Ethiopia. In increasingly dry climates, control of precious rivers is all - and if you sit upstream, you’re king. [WATCH: Taliban fighters clash with Iranian border guards] And Now for Something Different This week featured more evidence of the growing interest in space exploration on the part of some countries within the Gulf region, as the first Arab woman, Saudi national Rayyanah Barnawi, to be sent into orbit, returned to Earth. In fact, Barnawi’s arrival at the International Space Station was the first time that three Arab astronauts had been aboard the ISS simultaneously, with her fellow Saudi, Ali Alqarni, and the Emirati Sultan Alneyadi also present. Meanwhile, the United Arab Emirates announced it was going to launch a mission to an asteroid belt to increase understanding of the origins of life. Whitewashing Syria Now that the Syrian government has cozied up to its fellow Arab states at last month’s Arab League summit, authorities across the region are trying to start all over with President Bashar al-Assad. But millions of refugees, in places like Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan, are still living in desperate conditions, too afraid to return home. For Diana Semaan, Amnesty International’s Syria researcher, that fact means that Syria’s government has a lot to answer for. “No matter how much Arab leaders invest in rehabilitating the Syrian government’s image, through invitations to global conferences and diplomatic overtures, they will not be able to erase 12 years of war crimes,” she says in this opinion piece. Briefly Israeli shot dead near settlement in occupied West Bank | Saudi freed in Lebanon after kidnapping | Libya court sentences 23 to death for ISIL campaign | Ukraine’s parliament approves sanctions against Iran | Saudi Arabia executes two Bahrainis accused of “terrorism” | Palestinian Authority officer killed by Israeli forces in Jenin | Cristiano Ronaldo’s mixed first season in Saudi football | New Al-Aqsa provocation is building up on Israel’s far-right | Egyptian activists arrest sparks safety fears in Lebanon | WFP cuts aid to 200,000 Palestinian families | Egypt unveils ancient mummification workshops and tombs | Israeli settler kills Palestinian after alleged stabbing | Jordan’s Bedouins take on the struggles of climate change | Iran frees Belgian aid worker | Lebanon’s Druze leader Walid Jumblatt resigns as political party chief | UAE withdraws from US-led maritime coalition | 5 Palestinian fighters killed in Lebanon blast blamed on Israel | |
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