The New Zealand Herald

Chile wildfires destroy homes, livestock and livelihood­s

- Eva Vergara in Pumanque — AP

Lambs suffered broken legs trying to escape the blaze that tore across Tarcila Becerra’s land. Today there’s nothing on the blackened soil left for the few chickens that survived to graze on, and horses whinny in a makeshift stable a few blocks from her ravaged home.

“We tried to defend our home, but the flames were too big and we had to run out,” Becerra said later, standing next to a charred brick wall that’s just about all that remains of the house in Chile’s Colchagua Province.

She and her brothers work as fruit packers. But she fears that after missing a week of work to try to save their home and livestock, they may have lost their jobs too.

Residents in the town of Pumanque, located in the hard-hit south-central region of O’Higgins, have lost most of their belongings and their very livelihood to some of the worst wildfires ever seen in Chile.

The fast-spreading blazes of recent weeks have destroyed more than 130,000ha of forest; many fires are still burning, and more are expected to flare up.

Chile’s Public Works Ministry said yesterday that heavy machinery would be sent to the area to bury the hundreds of animals that died in the wave of fires, which have been stoked by a prolonged drought and temperatur­es topping 40C.

In Pumanque, 125km south of the capital, Santiago, residents have been battling the fires themselves, without any protective gear and often using just branches or bottles of water. The few helicopter­s working in the area have been dropping water on the flames, and firefighte­rs have dug ditches to stop their spread.

But sometimes those efforts are undone as winds or smoulderin­g ash spread the fires anew.

Their ferocity prompted President Michelle Bachelet to ask Brazil, Canada, Mexico, Peru and Spain for help.

The United States is also sending a group of experts and funds to replace equipment at Chile’s national forestry agency.

“Chile is living the greatest forest disaster in our history,” Bachelet said. “But we have the courage and the solidarity to face it.”

The Government has declared a state of emergency in the area. But some say the Government has been slow to make the declaratio­n, which frees up resources to be distribute­d to victims.

 ?? Picture / AP ?? Locals have been battling the fires without any protective gear and often using just branches or bottles of water.
Picture / AP Locals have been battling the fires without any protective gear and often using just branches or bottles of water.

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