The Boston Globe

At least 99 dead in Chile as residents return to ashes

Hundreds still missing after roaring wildfires

- By Annie Correal and John Bartlett

Days after devastatin­g wildfires swept through Chile’s Pacific Coast, officials said Sunday that at least 99 people had been killed and hundreds remained missing and warned that the number of dead could rise sharply.

“That number is going to go up; we know it’s going to go up significan­tly,” President Gabriel Boric said Sunday, describing the fires in the Valparaíso region as the worst disaster in the country since a cataclysmi­c earthquake in 2010 left more than 400 people dead and displaced 1.5 million.

Thousands of homes were destroyed in the fires, which swept through the coastal hills toward the resort of Viña del Mar starting Friday, propelled by high winds.

The fires came as many were vacationin­g in Viña del Mar and roared through hillside settlement­s where many older residents were not able to escape.

Omar Castro Vázquez, whose home was destroyed in the settlement of El Olivar, said a neighbor in his 80s had died in the fire.

“It was more like a nuclear bomb than a fire,” said Castro, 72. “There’s nothing left.”

The destructio­n in Valparaíso comes as dozens of fires are burning across central and southern Chile, amid what officials have said are higher-thannormal temperatur­es for this time of year.

Several other countries in South America have also struggled to contain wildfires. In Colombia, fires erupted in several parts of the country in recent weeks, including around the capital city of Bogotá, amid a spell of dry weather.

Firefighte­rs have also been battling blazes in Ecuador, Venezuela, and Argentina.

The cyclical climate phenomenon known as El Nino has caused droughts and high temperatur­es through parts of the continent, creating conditions that experts say are ripe for forest fires.

At dawn Sunday, bands of smoke clung to the hillsides above Viña del Mar. Along the highway to the coast, banks of earth and bridges were charred and tree stumps smoldered on the hillsides. The charred husks of cars littered the roads.

Early signs point to flawed evacuation orders, which some residents said may have contribute­d to the casualty count.

Photograph­s posted on X, the social platform formerly known as Twitter, showed long lines of burned cars that appeared to have been engulfed in flames as people attempted to leave, drawing comparison­s to the botched evacuation during last year’s fire in Lahaina, Hawaii.

Castro Vázquez said residents had fled to a local square when a cellphone alert came through about 6 p.m. Friday. They weren’t given any instructio­ns beyond that about having to flee, he said.

Black smoke plumed over a hill from a botanical garden on the other side of the hill, he said, and within minutes their community was engulfed in tall orange flames.

Another resident, Andrés Calderón, 40, said several people in the neighborho­od hadn’t wanted to leave their homes, fearing that thieves would burglarize them.

On Friday, he received the alert, jumped into his car, and drove through smoke so thick he said he had to turn on his headlights.

“It was like entering hell,” Calderón said. “I couldn’t see, the wind was blowing the car almost off the road. I just kept driving.”

On Sunday, the densely built area had been reduced to rubble. The roadsides were covered in corrugated metal sheets and debris pushed into piles, everything blackened and smelling of smoke.

Castro, a retired dockworker, said he had lost all of his clothes, possession­s, documents, and a chunk of his pension, which he had withdrawn and kept in cash.

 ?? RODRIGO ARANGUA/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A man walked past burned vehicles after a forest fire in Quilpue, Viña del Mar, Chile, Sunday.
RODRIGO ARANGUA/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES A man walked past burned vehicles after a forest fire in Quilpue, Viña del Mar, Chile, Sunday.

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