During the meeting, hosted by Iraq and the US at the UN headquarters in New York Wednesday, briefings were made on a possible breach in the structure of Mosul Dam, which is built on the Tigris River.
Located in northern Iraq, the Mosul Dam has suffered structural flaws over the years. The foundation it is built on is unstable and continuously erodes, according to reports.
Its brief seizure by the Takfiri Daesh terrorist group in August 2014 caused a lapse in required maintenance and inflicted further damage on the structure.
If it collapses, the lives of as many as 1.5 million people living in the flood path could be endangered.
Iraqi Ambassador Mohamed Ali Alhakim hosted experts from the US Army Corps of Engineers and officials from the UN Development Program and Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, and other senior diplomats participated in the event.
In a statement, US Ambassador Samantha Power urged all UN member states to take immediate steps to help prevent the Mosul dam collapse.
“It is crucial that all UN member states quickly get informed about the magnitude of the problem and the importance of readiness to prevent a humanitarian catastrophe of epic proportions,” she said.
If it collapses, a wave as high as 14 meters (45 feet) would be unleashed, she said.
The Italian Trevi Group is responsible for repairing the dam under a 273- million-euro (296-million-dollar) deal recently signed with the Iraqi government, PRESS TV reports.
Rome has also announced plans to deploy over 400 troops to protect the site of the dam, which is close to territory held by Daesh.
Daesh terrorists launched an offensive in Iraq in June 2014 and took control of swathes of Iraqi territory.
Their capture of the dam raised concerns that they would blow it up as a terrorist act.
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