At least 38 people were killed and several dozen were injured in forest fires that raged across 14 departments in northern Algeria on Wednesday, resurrecting the specter of the country’s deadliest summer in modern history.
“Twenty-six people were killed: two in Setif (east) and 24 in El Tarf (east), near the Tunisian border,” Interior Minister Kamel Beldjoud said during the 8:00 p.m. news. This figure was later revised to 38 early Thursday morning.
Several people were burned or had breathing difficulties, but no new official figures on the number of injured were provided.
A previous report by the civil protection said that four people had various degrees of burns and 41 others suffered from breathing difficulties in Souk Ahras, another border town with Tunisia. Television images showed residents of the city fleeing their homes in the face of flames.
According to local media, more than 350 families fled their homes in Souk Ahras. The gendarmerie closed several roads because of the fires.
“Thirty-nine fires in 14 wilayas (prefectures) are ongoing,” said in the afternoon the civil protection, noting that the wilaya of El Tarf recorded the largest number of fires with 16 fires, many still ongoing.
According to the private television Ennahar, about fifty people are hospitalized in El Tarf, a city of about 100,000 inhabitants.
Helicopter water bombers intervened in three prefectures including Souk Ahras, a town of about 500,000 inhabitants. Those of the civil protection are supported by army helicopters.
Algeria has chartered a Russian water bomber Beriev BE 200, but after having intervened on different fires, it has suffered a breakdown and will be operational again only from Saturday, according to Beldjoud.
These fires revive wounds and the debate on the lack of water bomber aircraft in sufficient numbers, which had already agitated the country last summer.
– Contract cancellation –
According to the Mena Defense website, following their quarrel with Spain, the Algerian authorities have cancelled a contract with the Spanish company Plysa, a specialist subsidiary of the airline Air Nostrum, for the supply of seven water bomber aircraft.
At the end of June, Algeria suspended a 2002 “treaty of friendship, good neighbourliness and cooperation” with Spain, after Madrid reversed its position on the Western Sahara issue to align itself with Morocco.
No plan B has been foreseen to replace all these Spanish aircraft, according to various media.
Since the beginning of August, 106 fires have broken out in Algeria, destroying 800 hectares of forest and 1,800 hectares of coppice, said the Minister of the Interior.
“Some of these fires are caused,” said Beldjoud.
With the 38 deaths on Wednesday, the death toll for the summer of 2022 climbs to 42.
Algeria, the largest country in Africa, has only 4.1 million hectares of forests, with a meager reforestation rate of 1.76%.
Every year, the north of the country is affected by forest fires, but this phenomenon is increasing from year to year due to climate change.
The summer of 2021 was the deadliest: at least 90 people died in forest fires that ravaged the north, where more than 100,000 hectares of coppice went up in smoke.
The warming climate increases the likelihood of heat waves and droughts and, in turn, fires.