A flow of water from the Amazon/Tropical Atlantic across North Africa is interacting with a stationary cut off low pressure system located over Turkey.
Here is a view of the cut off low - 24 hour satellite animation from @zoom_earth
@zoom_earth Here is a close up of the other component of the weather setup - a massive stream of airborn moisture crossing the Sahara.
@zoom_earth This view shows the full system, which is over 7000kms long.
@zoom_earth The impacts of the weather pattern are already rather spectacular here we see a brief but intense rain system flare up over Jeddah and Medina Saudi Arabia last night.
@zoom_earth And here we see a continuation of that storm, crossing rapidly over the Arabian Peninsula and bringing rain to Kuwait.
This view shows the north western edge of the system where the Sahara stream is interacting with the low system over Turkey.
And while it appears there was no rain in this burst of activity over Egypt last night, the latest weather model forecasts contain widespread rainfall in Egypt's deserts and coastal regions.
This s a sixteen day PWAT forecast for the ME. The most intense activity comes at the end, in early January.
This is the corresponding rainfall solution from the same model run which contains the water/energy solution you see above. The widespread forecast #DesertRain towards the end of the simulation run in Libya, Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia is - I think - unusual.
Here's a 12 day rainfall forecast for the Northern part of this area from the Korean KMA Model.
The forecast above shows rainfall, admittedly modest, over most of Syria.
Here's a 12 day forecast for Jordan, Israel and Lebanon. A fair bit of rain is forecast here which will run into the Jordan valley. Rainfall levels forecast for Lebanon could cause flooding.
Finally we have a 10 day rain forecast for Turkey, much of which will fall as snow. Again rainfall levels are intense enough to cause flooding in some locations.
I will continue to monitor this system's development over coming days. Follow for updates.
Ethiopia is continuing to get on with shaping its future.
There is a striking contrast between this meeting which talks through action about what the likely path forward for Ethiopia will be and yesterday's disgraceful proceedings at the @UN_HRC.
The presentation by the European Group spokesman is particularly worth watching. This is followed by a brief, clear, response from Ethiopia to the proceedings.
The Director General of @WHO is once again abusing his position as a high UN Official to promote the interests of his former TPLF comrades, turned insurgents in their efforts to resurrect an over used misinformation operation focussed on the Tekeze River, for military purposes.
Since the beginning of this war in November 2020 the TPLF has been seeking to open an arms supply route from Sudan through Humera to provide materiel and fresh troops for TPLF's armed forces.
Refugee camps in Sudan have also been used to treat injured TPLF fighters, who have subsequently been caught with IDs fighting in Amhara, and to provide refuge - at the beginning of the war - to perpetrators of the Mai Kadra massacre where est. 1500+ civilians were killed.
From @xotrinx's War Update news service:
15/12 - Tigray soldiers that were UN peacekeepers defect & train TPLF rebels in Sudan
16/12 - The Sudan military moves its soldier to Ethiopian border
@washingtonpost@maxbearak@xotrinx . @maxbearak, the latest U.S. reporter on the ground near these camps tonight, with a fresh new story, which appears to be based primarily on HRW and Amnesty phone interviews with refugees in these camps will need to check his sources stories carefully.
There is a very clear pattern here, a story playbook which has been used now at least five times, on one occasion even scooping up the @USAID administrator @SamanthaJPower / @SamanthaJPower
#TigrayGenocide is trending on the eve of tomorrow's @UN_HRC meeting, and the top tweet is a brand new report from the @washingtonpost which appears to back up the new @amnesty / @hrw report that dropped today.
Oddly the tweet from @maxbearak doesn't contain the hashtag.
The report has been retweeted 43 times since publication 2 hours ago. Ten of those postings contain the hashtag. It appears the @Twitter algorithm has picked up @maxbearak's tweet via association with the hashtag.
Its a fairly long and comprehensive article based on interviews with refugees in Sudan - and unlike the Amnesty / HRW report contains comment from an Amhara official.
It appears @Amnesty has learned nothing in the course of this war about the methodological issues related to the manner in which it is reporting on HR issues in Tigray/North Ethiopia. amnesty.org/en/latest/news…
In Nov and Dec, @Amnesty and @HRW conducted phone IVs with 31 people, including 25 witnesses and survivors as well as relatives of those detained and expelled, about abuses by Amhara security forces against Tigrayan civilians in the towns of Adebai, Humera, and Rawyan."
This report is clearly being released today - on the eve of an urgently requested @UN_HRC meeting tomorrow in Geneva for political and diplomatic purposes. It may have even triggered the meeting.
@DrTedros@WorldPeaceFdtn@WHO@TuftsUniversity Additional information related to the @DrTedros Petition can be found in this PDF which details the case against him (prior to the current war) which was already compendious and which is based on his activities whilst serving as a TPLF leader in Ethiopia. ambapu.org/sites/default/…
Since the war began @DrTedros has used his influence, position and platform - contrary to the rules of the UN - to actively support the TPLF both behind the scenes and in public in pursuit of its efforts to depose the elected Govt. of Ethiopia.