Chile wildfire: At least 15 killed in south; state of emergency declared


Chile wildfire: At least 15 killed in south; state of emergency declared

Wildfires sweeping through southern Chile have left at least 15 people dead and forced tens of thousands to flee their homes, as authorities declared a state of emergency in the worst-hit areas.Security Minister Luis Cordero said the fatalities were linked to fires burning across the Ñuble and Biobío regions, around 500 kilometres south of the capital, Santiago. President Gabriel Boric on Sunday declared a state of natural disaster in the two regions, saying the scale of the emergency required the full mobilisation of state resources.“In the face of the ongoing serious fires, I have decided to declare a state of natural disaster for the Ñuble and Biobío regions,” Boric said in a post on X, adding that “all resources are available”.Fire crews were battling at least 19 active blazes nationwide, with 12 concentrated in the two southern regions. The government has yet to release an official assessment of the damage to homes or infrastructure.Alicia Cebrián, head of the National Service for Disaster Prevention and Response, told local media that around 20,000 people had been evacuated, most of them from the Biobío cities of Penco and Lirquén, which together have a population of about 60,000. Other government figures have put the number of evacuees even higher.Television footage showed flames tearing through neighbourhoods and burnt-out vehicles lining the streets.Chile has faced increasingly devastating wildfires in recent years. In February last year, fires near Viña del Mar killed 138 people and affected around 16,000 others, according to prosecutors and emergency officials.

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