Earth Changes
Fares is an agricultural village home to approximately 25,000 residents.
While they rely on arable land to survive, the continuous destruction of farms, trees, water supplies and even housing has forced many to try move away from the village into the desert, or onto higher terrain in the mountains.
However, government officials have been preventing evacuees from relocating onto what they claim is "private land," leaving many of Fares' residents homeless.
According to Sheikh Ahmed Abdel Hameed, a resident of Fares and key community activist, the initial floodings started in 2009 when oil drillers from DanaGas started test drilling on residential land in Fares without local consent.
"Not long after the drillers left, contaminated water started to pump out of the ground from the holes they had made, destroying everything," says Abdel Hameed, adding that now over 500 feddans of land and housing has been destroyed by constant flooding.
"It's poisonous water, and even small amounts destroy the plantations and trees, instead of hydrating them ... and sometimes it can get up to five feet high, destroying our houses too."
Hundreds of birds were washed ashore over the weekend covered with a sticky, oily substance. Experts say a change in the wind direction yesterday blew many birds out to sea and it is feared they will die of cold and exhaustion.

Thousands of dead fish line the banks of Lake Burrinjuck, with no proper explanation.
Liz Richardson from Good Hope Tourist Resort said the amount of dead fish was "unbelievable".
"Every type of fish," she said. "Lots of baby fish, lots of small cod."
Around eight kilometres of shoreline, downstream of Taemas Bridge and past Good Hope, was littered with fish carcasses.
The Department of Primary Industries said the cause of the fish kill was unclear.
About two months ago, an earthquake measuring a magnitude of 4.3 on the Richter scale hit the Slovenian side of the Karavanke mountain range, some 25 kilometers (15 miles) southwest of the Austrian border. In the year 2000, Austria's eastern provinces and its capital Vienna were shaken by the strongest earthquake in 20 years, Austrian television reported. The quake, which measured 4.8 on the Richter scale, caused minor damage to buildings in the provinces of Lower Austria and Burgenland. The epicenter was in the Lower Austrian town of Ebreichsdorf, some 20 km (13 miles) south of Vienna. - Global Post People's Daily
Some of the victims were taken to hospitals with non-life-threatening injuries, Japan's NHK reported.
Traffic movement on several main railway lines and highways in Hokkaido was halted as a result of the quake.
The quake that occurred at 11:17 pm (14:17 GMT) was marked 5 upper at JMA Seismic Intensity in several places in Hokkaido.
According to the US Geological Service, the epicenter of the earthquake was located at a depth of 120 kilometers.

Unusual Find: Christchurch couple Jack and Sharon Osikai found the giant squid floating in the water in South Bay, Kaikoura.
The squid, measuring about 8 metres in length, was found floating off the coast near Shark's Tooth point in South Bay about 8am by Jack and Sharon Osikai who were returning from a fishing trip.
The Christchurch couple, who have been holidaying in Kaikoura for about 20 years, said they had never seen anything like it.
2013-02-02 18:58:07 UTC
2013-02-03 05:58:07 UTC+11:00 at epicenter
Location
10.912°S 165.260°E depth=10.0km (6.2mi)
Nearby Cities
66km (41mi) WSW of Lata, Solomon Islands
551km (342mi) NNW of Luganville, Vanuatu
604km (375mi) ESE of Honiara, Solomon Islands
823km (511mi) NNW of Port-Vila, Vanuatu
1127km (700mi) N of We, New Caledonia
Technical Details
The earthquake is the largest recorded in the region since one on September 26, 1887 which had a magnitude of three. The Richter Magnitude Scale typically ranges from 0 to 9. David Galloway, a seismologist at the British Geological Survey in Edinburgh, said the earthquake was fairly small and went relatively unnoticed by residents because of the time of day it happened.
"We only had one person, who was already awake, report to us that they felt a slight rumbling," he said. "Most people will have been asleep when this happened and we wouldn't expect it to wake anyone up. If it was during the day, and in an area of higher population, we would expect more reports of people having felt it. It is one of five or six recorded in the region within a 30km (19-mile) radius, and the largest since 1887. It is not a region that experiences many earthquakes." No reports of any damage were made. - Herald Scotland











