The Korea Times

5,000 evacuated as Canary Islands wildfire rages

-

LOMO DEL PINO, Spain (AFP) —A raging wildfire on the Spanish holiday island of Gran Canaria forced the evacuation of some 5,000 people, authoritie­s said Sunday, warning it could take days for the blaze to be brought under control.

The fire, which has spread to the mountainou­s Cruz de Tejeda region popular with tourists for its breathtaki­ng views, is “extremely fierce” and “unstable”, said Canary Islands president Angel Victor Torres in a statement.

No fatalities have been reported. More than 600 firefighte­rs and 14 aircraft battled to contain the flames, hampered by strong winds and high temperatur­es.

With the temperatur­e set to rise Monday, authoritie­s estimate it could take days before the blaze is brought under control.

“The next few hours will be very important because the weather forecast for the night is not good,” Torres said.

The fire broke out days after another wildfire in the same region forced the evacuation of hundreds.

Gran Canaria is the second most populous of the Canary Islands in the Atlantic off the northwest coast of Africa.

The Canary Islands received 13.7 million foreign visitors last year, over half of them from Britain and Germany.

Spain is frequently plagued by huge forest fires because of its arid summer climate.

N’DJAMENA (AFP) — Chad’s President Idriss Deby declared a state of emergency in two eastern provinces on Sunday, authorizin­g summary shootings to “save the majority”, after violent intercommu­nal clashes left dozens dead earlier this month.

The state of emergency will run for three months in the Sila and Ouaddai regions bordering Sudan where 50 people have died since August 9 in fighting between Arab cattle herders and settled farmers, the president’s office said.

“From now, we will deploy military forces who are going to ensure the security of the population in the region,” Deby said while on a trip to Sila.

“We must disarm all the civilians who have weapons in their hands,” he said.

“If there is still fighting between Arabs and Ouaddaians… you shoot ten from each side to save the majority. You have authorizat­ion,” Deby said.

Deby’s comments sparked condemnati­on from the Chad Convention for Human Rights which said in a statement it was “scandalize­d by the call to massacre civilians.”

 ?? Reuters-Yonhap ?? Flames and smoke from a forest fire are seen in the village of Moya on the Canary Island of Gran Canaria, Spain, Sunday.
Reuters-Yonhap Flames and smoke from a forest fire are seen in the village of Moya on the Canary Island of Gran Canaria, Spain, Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Korea, Republic