The Prague Post - 'Tornado of fire': Algeria forest blazes kill 38

EUR -
AED 4.333587
AFN 81.420916
ALL 97.238261
AMD 452.085997
ANG 2.112695
AOA 1082.070129
ARS 1729.917898
AUD 1.770169
AWG 2.124019
AZN 2.007926
BAM 1.962979
BBD 2.375789
BDT 143.583931
BGN 1.956336
BHD 0.444851
BIF 3475.13181
BMD 1.180011
BND 1.511729
BOB 8.168877
BRL 6.274109
BSD 1.179614
BTN 103.962234
BWP 16.663947
BYN 3.994209
BYR 23128.211708
BZD 2.372377
CAD 1.624928
CDF 3372.471001
CHF 0.934683
CLF 0.028623
CLP 1122.863232
CNY 8.400456
CNH 8.391818
COP 4611.564813
CRC 594.173144
CUC 1.180011
CUP 31.270286
CVE 111.186522
CZK 24.310051
DJF 209.711261
DKK 7.464518
DOP 74.281404
DZD 152.805497
EGP 56.840816
ERN 17.700162
ETB 169.801026
FJD 2.638147
FKP 0.867269
GBP 0.865478
GEL 3.188903
GGP 0.867269
GHS 14.431913
GIP 0.867269
GMD 83.190442
GNF 10218.893268
GTQ 9.042071
GYD 246.792626
HKD 9.1817
HNL 30.869028
HRK 7.535199
HTG 154.35454
HUF 389.833105
IDR 19397.961563
ILS 3.943295
IMP 0.867269
INR 103.916467
IQD 1545.81415
IRR 49619.453937
ISK 143.20601
JEP 0.867269
JMD 189.45291
JOD 0.836659
JPY 173.394918
KES 152.458194
KGS 103.191548
KHR 4728.303325
KMF 493.831075
KPW 1062.018425
KRW 1629.417689
KWD 0.360141
KYD 0.982995
KZT 637.501615
LAK 25570.834227
LBP 105669.966981
LKR 356.303152
LRD 210.248463
LSL 20.473421
LTL 3.484265
LVL 0.713777
LYD 6.36619
MAD 10.595022
MDL 19.622769
MGA 5280.548073
MKD 61.714431
MMK 2476.9414
MNT 4244.64312
MOP 9.451468
MRU 47.11193
MUR 53.40754
MVR 18.066939
MWK 2049.678934
MXN 21.655995
MYR 4.96372
MZN 75.398933
NAD 20.484854
NGN 1768.387519
NIO 43.318822
NOK 11.60405
NPR 166.339374
NZD 1.976589
OMR 0.453704
PAB 1.179614
PEN 4.12119
PGK 4.928312
PHP 67.190973
PKR 332.114397
PLN 4.250859
PYG 8421.802113
QAR 4.296124
RON 5.064367
RSD 117.162076
RUB 97.435659
RWF 1706.295619
SAR 4.426154
SBD 9.696167
SCR 17.499389
SDG 709.740969
SEK 10.923927
SGD 1.508331
SHP 0.927303
SLE 27.5238
SLL 24744.240825
SOS 674.374887
SRD 46.186215
STD 24423.841157
STN 25.016229
SVC 10.321663
SYP 15342.333864
SZL 20.472932
THB 37.413428
TJS 11.153092
TMT 4.130038
TND 3.41852
TOP 2.763708
TRY 48.747638
TTD 8.006282
TWD 35.502399
TZS 2903.654943
UAH 48.602348
UGX 4134.120236
USD 1.180011
UYU 47.342751
UZS 14608.533932
VES 189.093633
VND 31129.274947
VUV 140.637514
WST 3.257895
XAF 658.364921
XAG 0.027631
XAU 0.000319
XCD 3.189038
XCG 2.125976
XDR 0.820456
XOF 657.855575
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.729324
ZAR 20.493419
ZMK 10621.434186
ZMW 27.867925
ZWL 379.962997
  • RBGPF

    -1.2700

    76

    -1.67%

  • BCC

    -0.5600

    85.12

    -0.66%

  • SCS

    0.0600

    16.87

    +0.36%

  • RYCEF

    0.2200

    15.64

    +1.41%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    24.32

    -0.16%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    24.45

    +0.2%

  • RELX

    0.3600

    46.86

    +0.77%

  • RIO

    1.2800

    63.72

    +2.01%

  • NGG

    0.0200

    71.62

    +0.03%

  • GSK

    -0.5300

    40.3

    -1.32%

  • BCE

    -0.4700

    23.69

    -1.98%

  • AZN

    -1.5100

    78.05

    -1.93%

  • JRI

    -0.0365

    14.06

    -0.26%

  • VOD

    -0.0400

    11.81

    -0.34%

  • BP

    0.3200

    34.21

    +0.94%

  • BTI

    -0.5600

    56.03

    -1%

'Tornado of fire': Algeria forest blazes kill 38
'Tornado of fire': Algeria forest blazes kill 38 / Photo: - - AFP

'Tornado of fire': Algeria forest blazes kill 38

Algerian firefighters battled Thursday to rein in forest fires that have ravaged large parts of the drought-hit North African country, killing almost 40 people including 12 who died in a bus trapped by the flames.

Text size:

Deadly forest fires have become an annual scourge in Algeria, where climate change is turning large areas into a tinderbox in the baking summer months.

Some residents have lost homes to the flames, and authorities have been accused of being ill-prepared, with few firefighting aircraft available despite record casualties in last year's blazes.

The justice ministry has launched an inquiry after Interior Minister Kamel Beldjoud suggested some of the fires were deliberately set.

At least 38 people have been killed including more than 10 children, according to multiple sources, including local journalists and the fire service.

Most were in the El Tarf region near Algeria's eastern border with Tunisia, an area which has been sweltering in 48 degree Celsius (118 Fahrenheit) heat.

At least 200 more people have suffered burns or respiratory problems, according to various Algerian media.

Algerian television showed people fleeing burning homes, women carrying children in their arms.

A journalist in El Tarf described "scenes of devastation" on the road to El Kala, a northeastern seaport.

"A tornado of fire swept everything away in seconds," he told AFP by telephone.

An AFP team in El Kala saw burned-out cars, exhausted people and charred trees amid the strong smell of smoke.

A witness, who asked not to be named, said 12 people had burned to death in their bus as they tried to escape when the fire ripped through an animal park.

Takeddine, a worker at the park who declined to give his full name, said staff had helped families with young children to escape as fire surrounded the park.

"Nobody came to help us, neither the fire service nor anyone else," he told AFP.

One of his colleagues died in the process, he added.

- Authorities criticised -

A medic in El Kala said 72 people had been admitted to the city's hospital, where nine had died and another nine remained in intensive care.

Associations across Algeria called for donations of money and medical supplies to help the victims.

The fire service said Thursday afternoon that 1,700 firefighters had been deployed to battle the fires, of which 24 were still raging.

A journalist in the mountainous area of Souk Ahras told AFP that a huge blaze in a forest nearby had sparked panic in the city of half a million people, where nearly 100 women and 17 newborn babies had to be evacuated from a hospital.

The scenes were reminiscent of fires last year which killed at least 90 people and seared 100,000 hectares (247,000 acres) of forest and farmland in the country's north.

That disaster provoked criticism of authorities over the lack of firefighting aircraft.

Algeria had agreed to buy seven such aircraft from Spanish firm Plysa, but cancelled the contract following a diplomatic row over the Western Sahara in late June, according to specialist website Mena Defense.

Authorities have rented a Russian Beriev Be 200 water bomber, but it broke down and is not expected to be operational again until Saturday, Interior Minister Kamel Beldjoud said.

The civil protection service and the army have access to several firefighting helicopters.

- 'The forest is weakened' -

Experts have called for a major effort to bolster the firefighting capacity of Africa's biggest country, which has more than four million hectares of forest.

One specialist, who asked not to be named, told AFP that in the 1980s the country had 22 Grumman aircraft for battling forest fires but that they had been "sold on the cheap, without any alternative solution being proposed".

Since early August, fires have destroyed more than 800 hectares of forest and 1,800 hectares of woodlands, according to Beldjoud.

On Thursday, Prime Minister Aimene Benabderrahmane defended the government's response, saying that the country had ordered four new firefighting aircraft -- but that they would not be available until December.

He added that strong winds had exacerbated the blazes and said authorities were "deploying all their means" to extinguish them.

He said bad land management had added to the problem.

"Today, the forest is weakened. It has been chipped away at," he said.

O.Ruzicka--TPP