On April 22 at about 0700 GMT the BBC News World Service reported that Shias in several southern Iraqi cities have changed their clocks to be "Karbala time". According to the story these Iraqis are 1 hour behind Baghdad, presumably because they are ignoring daylight-saving time. I heard the report on a radio station in Los Angeles, but haven't been able to find a copy at the BBC web site news.bbc.co.uk. Possibly the story was tape-delayed. This reminds me of the article in the Economist in June 2000, which said that Kurds were ignoring DST in northern Iraq. Rives McDow's excellent contacts at the time disagreed with this claim. Quite possibly a similar situation is occurring in southern Iraq right now.
I also know a few people (usually senior and religious, but no statistical relation to the level of education) who don't observe daylight saving time here in Iran. They say it breaks their habits, specially the ones about the prayer times. But I've yet to see a single semi-authority recommend such a practice. roozbeh On Sun, 2003-04-27 at 11:44, Paul Eggert wrote:
On April 22 at about 0700 GMT the BBC News World Service reported that Shias in several southern Iraqi cities have changed their clocks to be "Karbala time". According to the story these Iraqis are 1 hour behind Baghdad, presumably because they are ignoring daylight-saving time. I heard the report on a radio station in Los Angeles, but haven't been able to find a copy at the BBC web site news.bbc.co.uk. Possibly the story was tape-delayed.
This reminds me of the article in the Economist in June 2000, which said that Kurds were ignoring DST in northern Iraq. Rives McDow's excellent contacts at the time disagreed with this claim. Quite possibly a similar situation is occurring in southern Iraq right now.
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Paul Eggert -
Roozbeh Pournader