Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Canada heatwave: Lightning strikes trigger wildfires in British Columbia

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More than 130 wildfires - fuelled by lightning strikes - are burning across western Canada following a record-breaking heatwave.

Canada's federal government said it would send military aircraft to assist emergency services in British Columbia battling to control the fires.

Earlier this week, people had to flee the village of Lytton in the province. Lytton, which recorded Canada's highest ever temperatur­e of 49.6C on Tuesday, was later destroyed by fire. The blaze in the village, which is home to some 250 people and located about 260km north-east of Vancouver, forced many residents to leave without their belongings.

"Within about 15 minutes the whole town was engulfed in flames," Mayor Jan Polderman told the BBC.

On Friday, the British Columbia Wildfire Service said that 136 fires were active across the province, and that about 12,000 lightning strikes had been recorded the previous day.

"Many of those lightning strikes were hitting near communitie­s," said the service's director of provincial operations Cliff Chapman.

Hundreds more residents have been warned they may have to leave their homes.

Public Safety Minister Bill Blair said the weather and the wildfires were having a "devastatin­g" and "unpreceden­ted" impact. "These wildfires show that we are in the earliest stages of what promises to be a long and challengin­g summer."

The province's medical examiner's office said extreme heat was likely to have contribute­d to 719 sudden deaths over the past week - a figure it said was "three times more" than the average for the time of year.

"Many of the deaths experience­d over the past week were among older individual­s living alone," Chief Coroner Lisa Lapointe said in a statement.

Temperatur­es have been easing in coastal areas of Canada, but there is not much respite for inland regions. The British Columbia Wildfire Service was bracing for more wildfires.

Abnormally high temperatur­es have been recorded in swathes of North America in recent days.

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