
Fires engulf Turkiye's Mediterranean coast as government declares 2 disaster zones
ISTANBUL — Fresh wildfires broke out on Turkiye's Mediterranean coast Friday, as the government declared two western provinces to be disaster zones.
TV footage showed flames and smoke billowing into the sky close to high-rise apartment blocks in Antalya, where local and foreign visitors flock during the summer months.
Homes were evacuated in the city center and the outlying district of Aksu as the fire advanced, privately owned news agency DHA reported. Firefighters struggled to extinguish the blazes before strong winds could spread the fire, which closed a major coastal road.
Further along the coast, homes in the city of Manavgat were also threatened.
Local residents with hoses and buckets rushed to assist firefighters as water-dropping helicopters and planes also battled the flames. Police water cannons and municipal water trucks were also enlisted in firefighting efforts.
Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya said Friday that Izmir and Bilecik provinces had been declared 'disaster areas affecting public life,' one step down from the most serious level of emergency.
Between June 27 and July 24, residents from 120 neighborhoods nationwide were evacuated, Yerlikaya added, and more than 12,000 workers under the ministry's authority, such as police and rescue staff, had fought the fires.
In a social media post, the minister said 311 homes had been destroyed or heavily damaged during the month-long blazes and 85 temporary housing units were set up across three western provinces for those made homeless.
Turkiye has faced widespread outbreaks of forest fires since late June. Thirteen people have died, including 10 firefighters killed Thursday in a fire in Eskisehir, western Turkiye.
Temperatures above seasonal norms have been exacerbated by strong winds and dry conditions, resulting in dozens of wildfires.
East of Antalya, fires broke out in Adana and Mersin on Friday. Elsewhere in the country, firefighters continued battling blazes in Eskisehir and nearby Karabuk that have been raging for several days.
Andrew Wilks, The Associated Press

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