Cape Argus

Thousands told to flee as Haifa fires spread

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TENS of thousands of residents were ordered to leave the city of Haifa in Israel yesterday as wildfires threatened other areas, including the West Bank.

The fire was fuelled by unusually dry conditions and an easterly wind.

A senior minister in the Israeli government said he believed many of the blazes had been deliberate­ly set, but police said they had no hard evidence at this stage that arson was to blame. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday attributed the fires to “natural and unnatural” causes.

Television pictures showed a wall of flames raging through central neighbourh­oods of Haifa, a city of around 300 000 in the north of the country, including near a petrol station that firefighte­rs were rapidly dousing with water.

“Almost 50 percent of the fires are apparently arson,” Internal Security Minister Gilad Erdan told Army Radio.

Education Minister Naftali Bennett, the leader of a far-right party, suggested those who set them could not be Jewish.

The government received offers of help from Greece, Cyprus, Croatia, Turkey and Russia to fight the blazes billowing in multiple locations spread across nearly half the country. Aerial squadrons were dropping fire-retardant material to try to douse the heaviest fires and stem their spread.

A thick haze of smoke hung over Haifa, which rises up from the Mediterran­ean Sea overlookin­g a large port. Schools and universiti­es were being evacuated, and two nearby prisons were preparing to transfer inmates to other jails, a prisons service spokesman said. Patients were moved from a geriatric hospital.

A lack of rain combined with dry air and strong easterly winds have spread the fires this week across the centre and north of the country, as well as parts of the West Bank.

Scores of homes have been damaged or destroyed, but no deaths or serious injuries have been reported.

Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said investigat­ors had not yet been able to determine whether any of the fires had been set deliberate­ly.

Four people detained on Wednesday on suspicion of causing a fire near Jerusalem were released for lack of evidence, he said.

Haifa’s mayor said he was concerned for the city and its surroundin­g areas.

“Each neigbourho­od is situated among forests and while we are proud of this, at the moment it is a problem,” Yona Yahav told Israel’s Channel 2.

“There are some four major fire locations at the moment.”

Those leaving their homes were urged to go to sports stadiums among other safer locations.

Weather forecaster­s have said the tinder-dry conditions – it has not rained in parts of Israel for months – and strong winds are set to continue for several days and they see little prospect of normal seasonal precipitat­ion arriving. – Reuters

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? DEVASTATIO­N: Residents have been ordered to evacuate as fires cause destructio­n in the Israeli city of Haifa and surroundin­g areas. A man checks the damage to a house during a wildfire in the communal settlement of Nata, near Jerusalem.
PICTURE: REUTERS DEVASTATIO­N: Residents have been ordered to evacuate as fires cause destructio­n in the Israeli city of Haifa and surroundin­g areas. A man checks the damage to a house during a wildfire in the communal settlement of Nata, near Jerusalem.

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