Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Turkey subdues majority of forest fires as PKK group vows arson

The number of forest fires that have gripped the country since last week dropped to five from 107. Meanwhile, Turkey continues to suspect the fires may be linked to arson by the terrorist group PKK, whose affiliate threatened arson attacks yesterday

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TURKEY wrapped up a week in the fight against forest fires that devastated its southern region with relative success. The causes of the forest fires are still not clear, but suspicions center on the terrorist group PKK, whose members were behind previous forest fires in the country. An affiliate of the terrorist group did not directly claim responsibi­lity for the fires but openly threatened the country with arson attacks targeting both its forests and people yesterday.

As of yesterday, 107 out of 112 wildfires across the country are under control, the

Minister of Agricultur­e and Forestry Bekir Pakdemirli announced. President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who was in Antalya to visit the affected areas, said multiple investigat­ions were underway to find the possible perpetrato­rs behind the fires. “We hope that our police, gendarme and intelligen­ce units will analyze every sign, informatio­n and intelligen­ce on this issue. We are disturbed by the sabotage suspicion. If there are traitors who have gone so far to set our country on fire, it is our duty to nab them and ensure they receive the harshest punishment,” Erdoğan said.

TURKEY wrapped up a week in the fight against forest fires that devastated its southern region with relative success. The causes of the forest fires are still not clear, but suspicions center on the terrorist group PKK, whose members were behind previous forest fires in the country. An affiliate of the terrorist group did not directly claim responsibi­lity for the fires but openly threatened the country with arson attacks targeting both its forests and people yesterday.

As of yesterday, 107 out of 112 wildfires across the country are under control, the Minister of Agricultur­e and Forestry Bekir Pakdemirli announced. President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who was in Antalya to visit the affected areas, said multiple investigat­ions were underway to find the possible perpetrato­rs behind the fires. “We hope that our police, gendarme and intelligen­ce units will analyze every sign, informatio­n and intelligen­ce on this issue. We are disturbed by the sabotage suspicion. If there are traitors who have gone so far to set our country on fire, it is our duty to nab them and ensure they receive the harshest punishment,” Erdoğan said.

The president said that they were aware that the number of forest fires and areas affected by forest fires doubled after the leaders of “the terrorist group” instructed their subordinat­es to set forests on fire last year. He was referring to the PKK. “We are determined to wipe out the cells of terrorist group in cities, just like we are close to ending their presence in the mountains and beyond our borders,” Erdoğan added.

Turkish people on social media were quick to put the blame on the PKKlinked “Children of Fire Initiative” late Thursday for a series of fires that have hit Turkey recently, as PKK sympathize­rs also hailed the fires on Twitter. The PKK has a long history of burning Turkey’s forests as a method of “vengeance” against the Turkish state, causing civilian deaths and environmen­tal destructio­n in the process. The almost consecutiv­e nature of fires triggered concerns that they might be the result of a string of arson attacks, which Turkish netizens blamed the PKK for. The so-called “initiative,” in a statement published on their website, threatened the country with new arson attacks yesterday. The group said they would carry out arson attacks everywhere, along with sabotage attacks. It called upon its members to kill anyone opposing the terrorist group by starting fires.

One of the PKK’s highest-ranking members, Murat Karayılan, also previously hailed the method of using arson in terrorist attacks in a statement. “Two or three youths may well gather and do something. They may say ‘we don’t have a weapon’ but their weapons are lighters and matches,” he said. The PKK-linked group used almost verbatim these sentences in their threat.

Şemdin Sakık, another high-ranking PKK terrorist, also previously said that the terrorist group would resort to similar actions if need be. “If we run out of weapons, we will go to Bodrum and burn their yachts, go to Antalya to burn their greenhouse­s, go to Istanbul to burn their cars and go to Izmir to burn their forests,” he said.

Last October, four provinces around Turkey also fell victim to the PKK’s hatred of nature, with almost simultaneo­us fires destroying forests in various parts of the country. Turkish authoritie­s were quick to detain suspected arsonists who burned forestland in southern Hatay province’s Belen district, and it was not long before a PKK-aligned terrorist group claimed responsibi­lity for the attack. The “Children of Fire Initiative” glorified the attacks on Turkey’s forests, praising the terrorists who initiated the fire. The so-called “initiative” was responsibl­e for many arsons in recent years, and the group is known for its close ties to the PKK terrorist group.

Meanwhile, PKK sympathize­rs took to social media and further manifested their hatred of forests with jokes making fun of the fire, in a collective effort of terror propaganda. Sharing the links of PKK-linked websites Fırat News Agency (ANF) and Nuçe Ciwan’s articles that glorify the arsons, the group’s sympathize­rs continued to celebrate the damage dealt to the environmen­t by the terrorists. In 2019, the group also claimed responsibi­lity for wildfires in Turkey’s western, northweste­rn and southern provinces, declaring “fiery revenge” against the state.

The first major fires started last Wednesday and the biggest among them broke out in the town of Manavgat, in the Mediterran­ean province of Antalya. The blaze still continues as firefighte­rs, aided by water bomber planes and helicopter­s, struggle to contain flames that gutted hundreds of houses, mostly in villages. Overall, 13 fires broke out in the province’s Manavgat and Gündoğmuş districts and only two remain burning.

A fire in the Gazipaşa district, which threatened to spread to other towns in the area, was extinguish­ed as of yesterday. In Antalya’s western neighbor Muğla, a province also home to popular vacation resort towns, three out of eight fires are still burning, affecting the towns of Marmaris, Köyceğiz and Milas. Another major fire in Bodrum, a gem in “Turkish Riviera” wildly popular among local and foreign tourists, was also contained. In Adana, the southern province that saw 20 wildfires break out since Wednesday, all fires were brought “under control,” officials announced.

Though the fires are under control, flames are still seen while cooling efforts are hampered by occasional strong winds fanning the flames. The wildfires were deadliest in Antalya, where five people, including two firefighte­rs, were killed after they were stranded in the midst of fast-spreading flames. The sixth victim was a young man trying to aid firefighte­rs in Marmaris, who died when his motorcycle crashed in a firehit area and he was caught in the middle of a forest fire. Yesterday, media outlets reported that a Turkish man and his German-Turkish wife were also found dead in their burned home in Kalemler village in Manavgat, bringing the death toll to seven in the town. The blazes left a large number of people homeless, especially in Manavgat.

The country has declared the place “a disaster area” and pledged aid and new residences for locals affected by the fires. Most were villagers, who, along with their homes, lost livestock, their main source of income. A total of 42 rural neighborho­ods were affected by the fires, with forced evacuation occurring in 27 neighborho­ods. Some 279 people were hospitaliz­ed for smoke inhalation and burns in Manavgat, where the first fires started in four different spots. On the fifth day, small fires are still burning in the Sırtköy area of Manavgat and on the slopes of Güğlen Mountain. In Kalemler, one of the villages most affected by the Manavgat fire, bulldozers started demolishin­g houses that were completely burned or heavily damaged by the fire yesterday. Locals are taken to a safe location in the district where aid delivery spots were establishe­d.

In Marmaris and Köyceğiz, firefighte­rs spent Saturday night fighting flames on the ground as the night impeded efforts to intervene from the air Helicopter­s and planes resumed operations yesterday morning. In Marmaris, 100 firefighte­rs dispatched by Azerbaijan aided local firefighte­rs yesterday.

A fire that began in the Armutalan neighborho­od quickly spread to eight neighborho­ods heavily populated by holidaymak­ers. A fire in Milas had spread to Bodrum, prompting evacuation in the Mazı neighborho­od.

At a press conference in Muğla on Saturday, Minister Pakdemirli had warned that caution will be needed to combat the massive fires on Sunday when humidity is expected to drop 10%. Blazes broke out in at least 21 provinces, including several Mediterran­ean provinces.

President Erdoğan said on Saturday that $5.91 million (TL 50 million) has been allocated to meet the urgent needs in areas that have experience­d destructio­n and property damage. He said Turkey was mobilizing all means to bring the blazes under control.

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 ??  ?? Satellite images shared by the Ministry of National Defense show the forest fire affecting Marmaris, in Muğla, Turkey, Aug. 1, 2021.
Satellite images shared by the Ministry of National Defense show the forest fire affecting Marmaris, in Muğla, Turkey, Aug. 1, 2021.
 ??  ?? People flee as flames engulf an area in Manavgat district, in Antalya, Turkey, Aug. 1, 2021.
People flee as flames engulf an area in Manavgat district, in Antalya, Turkey, Aug. 1, 2021.

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