- Benin court jails two ex-allies of president for 20 years
- Elite figure skaters and coaches on crashed US flight
- New abnormal begins for east DR Congo's looted Goma after siege
- Easterby ready for long-term contest between Ireland fly-half duo
- Siao Him Fa leads on sombre day at figure skating Europeans
- Shiffrin fifth ahead of second run in bid for 100th World Cup win
- Trump blames 'diversity' for deadly Washington airliner collision
- 'No awkwardness' for Dupont's France with Jegou, Auradou selection
- Lula says if Trump hikes tariffs, Brazil will reciprocate
- Merkel slams successor over far-right support on immigration bill
- PSG sweat on Zaire-Emery fitness for Champions League play-off
- Stock markets firm on ECB rate cut, corporate results
- Russian drone barrage kills eight in east Ukraine
- Mexican economy shrinks for first time in three years
- 'No awkardness' for Dupont's France with Jegou, Auradou selection
- Israel releases Palestinian prisoners after hostages freed
- BBC apologises to staff over Russell Brand sex complaints
- Nostalgia and escapism: highlights from Paris Couture Week
- UK prosecutors defend jail terms of environmental activists
- Qatari emir tells Syria leader 'urgent need' for inclusive government
- British sailor Davies completes Vendee after 80 days at sea
- Dubai airport clocks record 92.3m passengers, extending hot streak
- IOC presidential contenders deliver their vision for sport in post-Bach era
- Stock markets rise on ECB rate cut, healthy corporate results
- Tears of joy for Thai hostages freed in Gaza
- No survivors after helicopter collides with plane over Washington
- Rwanda-backed M23 pledges to 'march all the way to Kinshasa'
- Jonny Gray returns for Scotland against Italy in Six Nations
- Russian drone barrage kills three elderly couples in east Ukraine
- Italy turn to Allan for Six Nations opener against Scotland
- US economic growth steady in 2024 as Trump takes office
- Leipzig sign in-demand Xavi Simons from PSG until 2027
- Israel halts prisoner release after Gaza hostages freed
- Merlier at the double at Al-Ula Tour
- French rapist Dominique Pelicot questioned over 1990s cases
- Gray returns for Scotland against Italy in Six Nations
- El Salvador merchants no longer obliged to accept bitcoin
- 'I'm out of here': French town braces for rising floods
- ECB cuts rate again as eurozone falters, with eye on Trump
- UK unveils 'counter-terror style' police powers to stop migrants
- No survivors from plane, helicopter collision in Washington
- France hands over last base in Chad amid withdrawal
- Six arrested over plot to kidnap French YouTube star
- Doubters 'drive' Morgan's Wales before Six Nations opener in Paris
- Figure skating mourns victims of US plane crash
- Richard Gere to be honoured at Spain's top film awards
- Gerrard leaves Saudi club Al-Ettifaq by mutual agreement
- New-look Champions League produces jeopardy, but giants survive
- Syria, Qatar discuss reconstruction during emir's visit
- France, Germany stall eurozone growth in fourth quarter
Dead Sea an 'ecological disaster', but no one can agree how to fix it
An abandoned lifeguard cabin, a rusty pier and mangled umbrellas are all that is left of Ein Gedi, once Israel's flagship beach drawing international tourists to float in the world-famous waters of the Dead Sea.
Now, this lush desert oasis at the lowest point on Earth sits in ruins beside the shrinking sea, whose highly salty waters are rapidly retreating due to industrial use and climate change, which is accelerating their natural evaporation.
The beach has been closed to the public for five years, mainly due to the appearance of dangerous sinkholes, but also because the dramatic recession of the sea's level has made it tricky to reach its therapeutic waters, known for extraordinary buoyancy that lets bathers float effortlessly.
The increasingly exposed shoreline and the sinkholes, caused by a flow of freshwater dissolving layers of salt beneath the Earth's surface, are not new.
In fact, the Dead Sea, nestled where Israeli, Jordanian and Palestinian territory meet, has famously been dying for years.
Now, with war raging in the Middle East, efforts to tackle this ever-worsening ecological disaster appear to have dissolved too.
"Regional cooperation is the key... to saving the Dead Sea," said Nadav Tal, a hydrologist and water officer for the Israel office of EcoPeace, a regional environmental nonprofit that has long advocated for finding a solution.
"Because we are living in a conflict area, there is an obstacle," he said, describing how the sea has been declining more than one metre (three feet) per year since the 1960s.
- 'Ecological disaster' -
The evaporation of the salty waters in a time of rapid climate change and in a place where summer temperatures can reach upward of 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees Fahrenheit) has been exacerbated by decades of water diversions from the sea's main source -- the Jordan River -- as well as various tributaries that begin in Lebanon and Syria.
The water is also being pumped out by local factories extracting natural minerals -- potash, bromine, sodium chloride, magnesia, magnesium chloride and metal magnesium -- to sell to markets across the world.
"The consequences of this water diversion is what we see around us," Tal told AFP, pointing to a nearby pier that was once submerged in water but now stands firmly on dry land.
"It is an ecological disaster," he emphasised, adding that "the declining of the Dead Sea is a disaster for Israeli tourism".
The only remaining Israeli resorts are on the man-made evaporation ponds south of the surviving Dead Sea itself.
Recently, 22-year-old Yael and her friend Noa were looking for a place to dip their toes into the soothing waters.
Relaxing beside one of the water-filled sinkholes, Yael recalled how her parents once enjoyed going to a public beach near here.
"It was like their beach on the Dead Sea, and nowadays you pass by there and it looks like, I don't know... a shipwreck," she told AFP.
"It's hallucinatory, the destruction caused by this thing (the drying up of the sea), and it's just such a special landscape."
- Call for joint effort -
Although some efforts have been made to address the Dead Sea disaster, including past agreements signed by Israel and Jordan, the wars raging in Gaza and beyond have brought regional tensions to an all-time high, meaning tackling cross-border environmental issues is no longer a priority for governments in the region.
At Israel's environment ministry, Ohad Carny has been working on the issue for years.
He said the government was looking into several solutions, including building a desalination facility and forging a canal from either the north or the south to address the general water shortages in the region, including the Dead Sea.
"It doesn't make economic or environmental sense to desalinate water and bring it directly to the Dead Sea, because then it's a waste of drinking water and the region needs desperately more drinking water and more water for agriculture," he said.
Carny said that while his focus was on the Israeli side, "we are hoping for collaborations".
"We can't do it alone. It must be a joint effort. So only time will tell, and we won't do anything without an agreement together with the Jordanian side," he said.
"We need to understand the economic and environmental aspects of the options, and of course agree about the right solution with the Jordanians."
Back at the Dead Sea, bus driver Benny, 40, was soaking up the winter sun at one of the warm sulphur-infused sinkhole pools.
"The situation is very frustrating," he said about the sea's new topography. "But everything has a plus and minus. Because of what is happening here, we have water spots like this one."
Y.Bouchard--BTB