‘Apocalyptic' Turkey wildfires spread as 14 killed in blazes sparked by record 50C heatwave
More than 1,500 people have fled their homes and one firefighter has died as overnight fires in the forested mountains surrounding Bursa, in north west Turkey, have spread rapidly.
Flames have scorched 3,000 hectares around the city and more than 1,100 firefighters battled the flames around Bursa, as the highway linking the city to the capital, Ankara, was closed as forests surrounding burned.
A firefighter died from a heart attack while on the job, the city's mayor, Mustafa Bozbey, said in a statement. The governor's office stated on Sunday that 1,765 people had been safely evacuated from villages to the north east.
Orhan Saribal, an opposition parliamentarian for the province, described the scene as "an apocalypse."
By morning, lessening winds have brought some respite to firefighters, who continued their efforts to battle the flames. However, TV footage revealed a barren landscape where farms and pine forests had earlier stood.
Some 14 people have died in recent weeks, including 10 rescue volunteers and forestry workers killed Wednesday in a fire in Eskisehir in western Turkey.
Unseasonably high temperatures, dry conditions and strong winds have fuelled the flames that has led to dozens of severe wildfires hitting the country daily since late June. The government declaring two western provinces, Izmir and Bilecik, disaster areas on Friday.
Turkey's minister of agriculture and forestry İbrahim Yumaklı said fire crews across the country confronted 76 separate blazes Saturday, 28 of which were in forests and 48 in rural areas, and the country's north west was under the greatest threat, including Karabuk, where wildfires have burned since Tuesday.
Mr Yumaklı said Turkey broken an all-time temperature record on Friday of 50.5C in the southeastern Sirnak. Information published by the country's General Directorate of Meteorology suggested that temperatures would rise by another 10 degrees, starting Saturday. The highest temperatures for July were seen in 132 other locations.
Justice Minister Yilmaz Tunc said late Saturday that prosecutors had investigated fires in 33 provinces since June 26, and that legal action had been taken against 97 suspects.
Minister Yumaklı, shared a message to citizens, telling them that the best way to extinguish fires is to prevent them in the first place.
"As the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, we are on the ground fighting forest fires with our planes, helicopters, and unmanned aerial vehicles in the sky, our forest heroes on duty 24/7 on the ground, our land vehicles, AFAD, the provincial governor's office, local governments, and non-governmental organizations.
'We are ready, but the best way to extinguish fires—cost-free, problem-free, and without paying any price—is to prevent them from starting."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Washington Post
an hour ago
- Washington Post
Deadly wildfires force thousands to evacuate in Turkey and Greece
Deadly wildfires continue to burn in northwestern Turkey, forcing thousands to flee and prompting water restrictions at resorts on the Mediterranean. Turkey has been battling blazes for weeks but high winds and soaring temperatures — which hit a record 122.9 degrees on Friday, local media reported, citing the Turkish State Meteorological Service — have hampered firefighters. The fires have killed at least 17 people in recent weeks. 'We are going through risky days,' Forestry Minister Ibrahim Yumakli told reporters on Sunday. 'This is not something that will stop in two days or three days.' Turkey was 'waging a major battle both in the air and on the ground against forest fires,' President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the same day in an online statement. More than 3,000 fires had been extinguished across the country since the start of summer, he said. The worst blazes were near Bursa — the country's fourth-largest city, about 100 miles by car from Istanbul — where 2,300 firefighters were deployed on Sunday, Yumakli said. Firefighters worked overnight as the blaze crept along the ridgelines of the hilly terrain outside the city of roughly 3 million people. Orhan Saribal, an opposition member of parliament representing Bursa, described the scene as 'an apocalypse' as he spoke to a local TV station against the backdrop of a burning forest on Saturday night. By Sunday, the number of active fires had dropped from 84 to 44, including some blazes in northern and southern Turkey, Yumakli said. More than 3,000 people had been evacuated. Wildfires also burned over the weekend in Bulgaria, Albania, Montenegro and Greece, where explosions could be heard in villages near Athens as blazes reached factories with flammable material, Reuters reported. Residents of at least one suburb of the Greek capital received alerts to evacuate. Southern Europe has been bit by heat waves this summer that have depleted water reservoirs and turned forests into tinderboxes. In the resort town of Cesme on Turkey's Mediterranean coast, officials have implemented overnight water cuts as supplies run low, according to local media. The fires in Turkey have killed at least 17 people in recent weeks, including 10 rescue volunteers and forestry workers who died in Eskisehir province last week, according to the Associated Press. Another firefighter died from a heart attack over the weekend, Bursa's mayor said in an online statement. Three people were also killed when a tanker delivering water to firefighters rolled off the road on Sunday, according to local officials. Though wildfires are common in southern Europe this time of year, they are becoming more frequent and intense as the weather gets hotter and drier because of climate change, scientists say. 'The number of days of high or extreme fire danger in southern Europe is already at levels we thought we wouldn't see until 2050,' Jesus San Miguel, a senior researcher at the European Commission's Joint Research Centre, told The Washington Post in 2023. 'Because of climate change, we are going much faster than we thought.' Erdogan on Sunday said he prayed for all those 'who became martyrs in the fight against the fires,' adding that the country remained on 'high alert day and night.'

Associated Press
3 hours ago
- Associated Press
2 volunteers die fighting Turkey wildfires, raising deaths to 17 since late June
ISTANBUL (AP) — The death toll from wildfires outside the city of Bursa in northwest Turkey rose to four late Sunday after two volunteer firefighters died. The pair died in hospital after they were pulled from a water tanker that rolled while heading to a forest fire, news agency IHA reported. Another worker died earlier at the scene of the accident and a firefighter died Sunday after suffering a heart attack. Their deaths raised Turkey's wildfire fatalities to 17 since late June, including 10 rescue volunteers and forestry workers killed Wednesday in a fire in Eskisehir, western Turkey. Huge fires around Bursa, Turkey's fourth-largest city, broke out over the weekend, leading to more than 3,500 people fleeing their homes. On Monday morning, fog-like smoke from ongoing fires and smouldering foliage hung over the city. Unseasonably high temperatures, dry conditions and strong winds have been fueling the wildfires, with Turkey and other parts of the eastern Mediterranean experiencing record-breaking heatwaves. The fires around Bursa were among hundreds to have hit Turkey over the past month. While firefighting teams have contained the damage to a limited number of homes, vast tracts of forest have been turned to ash. The water tanker crew comprised volunteers from nearby Bolu province heading to the village of Aglasan, northeast of Bursa, to combat a blaze when the vehicle fell into a ditch while negotiating a rough forest track, IHA reported. Turkey battled at least 44 separate fires Sunday, Forestry Minister Ibrahim Yumakli said late Sunday. He identified two fires in Bursa province, as well as blazes in Karabuk, northwest Turkey, and Kahramanmaras in the south, as the most serious. The government declared disaster areas in two western provinces, Izmir and Bilecik. Prosecutions have been launched against 97 people in 33 of Turkey's 81 provinces in relation to the fires, Justice Minister Yilmaz Tunc said. A crowd of people gathered Sunday evening outside a police station in the village of Harmancik, 57 kilometers (35 miles) south of Bursa, after learning a suspected arsonist was detained there. The angry crowd demanded for the suspect to be handed over to them. The crowd dispersed after police assured them a thorough investigation would be undertaken.


Bloomberg
3 hours ago
- Bloomberg
Magnitude 5.0 Earthquake Strikes Southern Iran, USGS Says
A 5.0 magnitude earthquake struck in southern Iran on Monday morning, according to the US Geological Survey. The earthquake had a depth of 10 kilometers and was 28.8 kilometers west south west of Mohr.