-
Russell eager to face Scotland team-mates when Bath play Edinburgh
-
Undav scores again as Stuttgart sink Frankfurt to go third
-
Fuming French farmers camp out in Paris despite government pledges
-
Man Utd appoint Carrick as manager to end of the season
-
Russia strikes power plant, kills four in Ukraine barrage
-
France's Le Pen says had 'no sense' of any offence as appeal trial opens
-
JPMorgan Chase reports mixed results as Dimon defends Fed chief
-
Vingegaard targets first Giro while thirsting for third Tour title
-
US pushes forward trade enclave over Armenia
-
Alpine release reserve driver Doohan ahead of F1 season
-
Toulouse's Ntamack out of crunch Champions Cup match against Sale
-
US takes aim at Muslim Brotherhood in Arab world
-
Gloucester sign Springbok World Cup-winner Kleyn
-
Trump tells Iranians 'help on its way' as crackdown toll soars
-
Iran threatens death penalty for 'rioters' as concern grows for protester
-
US ends protection for Somalis amid escalating migrant crackdown
-
Oil prices surge following Trump's Iran tariff threat
-
Fashion student, bodybuilder, footballer: the victims of Iran's crackdown
-
Trump tells Iranians to 'keep protesting', says 'help on its way'
-
Italian Olympians 'insulted' by torch relay snub
-
Davos braces for Trump's 'America First' onslaught
-
How AI 'deepfakes' became Elon Musk's latest scandal
-
Albania's waste-choked rivers worsen deadly floods
-
Cancelo rejoins Barca on loan from Al-Hilal
-
India hunts rampaging elephant that killed 20 people
-
Nuuk, Copenhagen mull Greenland independence in Trump's shadow
-
WHO says sugary drinks, alcohol getting cheaper, should be taxed more
-
Arteta urges Arsenal to learn from League Cup pain ahead of Chelsea semi
-
Davos elite, devotees of multilateralism, brace for Trump
-
Spanish star Julio Iglesias accused of sexual assault by two ex-employees
-
Trump's Iran tariff threat pushes oil price higher
-
US consumer inflation holds steady as affordability worries linger
-
Iran to press capital crime charges for 'rioters': prosecutors
-
Denmark, Greenland set for high-stake talks at White House
-
Iranian goes on trial in France ahead of possible prisoner swap
-
Cold winter and AI boom pushed US emissions increase in 2025
-
Hong Kong activist investor David Webb dies at 60
-
Try to be Mourinho and I'll fail: new Real Madrid coach Arbeloa
-
Vingegaard targets Giro d'Italia and Tour de France double
-
South Korean prosecutors demand death penalty for ex-leader Yoon
-
Iwobi hails Nigerian 'unity' with Super Eagles set for Morocco AFCON semi
-
Le Pen appeal trial opens with French presidential bid at stake
-
Iran ex-empress urges security forces to join protesters
-
Sudan 'lost all sources of revenue' in the war: finance minister to AFP
-
Freezing rain hampers transport in Central Europe
-
Nuuk, Copenhagen cautiously mull Greenland independence
-
'Proving the boys wrong': Teenage racers picked for elite driver programme
-
Mbappe absent from training as Arbeloa takes charge at Real Madrid
-
Iran worries push up oil price as world stocks diverge
-
Volvo Cars pauses battery factory after fruitless partner search
| RBGPF | 1.13% | 82.5 | $ | |
| RYCEF | -0.06% | 17.28 | $ | |
| BP | 2.81% | 35.405 | $ | |
| CMSC | 0.34% | 23.39 | $ | |
| NGG | -2.19% | 78.05 | $ | |
| BTI | 1.63% | 56.605 | $ | |
| AZN | 0.76% | 94.348 | $ | |
| SCS | 0.12% | 16.14 | $ | |
| GSK | -0.74% | 50.02 | $ | |
| RELX | -1.33% | 42.21 | $ | |
| RIO | 1.06% | 83.77 | $ | |
| VOD | -2.85% | 13.175 | $ | |
| JRI | -0.07% | 13.8 | $ | |
| BCC | 0.84% | 83.66 | $ | |
| CMSD | -0.05% | 23.852 | $ | |
| BCE | -0.68% | 23.68 | $ |
Algeria fire crews rein in blazes that left 38 dead
Algerian firefighters on Thursday brought under control a string of forest blazes that have killed at least 38 people including 12 who died in a bus trapped by the flames.
Deadly fires have become an annual scourge in Algeria, where climate change has turned large areas of forest into a tinderbox in the blistering summer months.
Authorities have been accused of being ill-prepared, with few firefighting aircraft available despite record casualties in last year's blazes and a cash windfall from gas exports amid soaring global energy prices.
Fire service spokesman Farouk Achour told AFP late Thursday that 16 fires were still burning across seven districts but that those in the worst-hit eastern areas, El Tarf and Souk Ahras, were under control.
In Souk Ahras, a large crowd gathered to mourn five members of the same family who perished in the flames.
The justice ministry launched an inquiry after Interior Minister Kamel Beldjoud suggested some of the fires were deliberately started, and authorities on Thursday announced four arrests of suspected arsonists.
At least 38 people have been killed including more than 10 children and 10 firefighters, according to multiple sources, including local journalists and the fire service.
Most were in the El Tarf region near Algeria's eastern border with Tunisia, an area which has been sweltering in 48 degree Celsius (118 Fahrenheit) heat.
At least 200 more people have suffered burns or respiratory problems, according to various Algerian media.
Algerian television showed people fleeing burning homes, women carrying children in their arms.
A journalist in El Tarf described "scenes of devastation" on the road to El Kala, a northeastern seaport.
"A tornado of fire swept everything away in seconds," he told AFP by telephone.
An AFP team in El Kala saw burned-out cars, exhausted people and charred trees amid the strong smell of smoke.
A witness, who asked not to be named, said 12 people had burned to death in their bus as they tried to escape when the fire ripped through an animal park.
Takeddine, a worker at the park who declined to give his full name, said staff had helped families with young children to escape as fire surrounded the park.
"Nobody came to help us, neither the fire service nor anyone else," he told AFP.
One of his colleagues died in the process, he added.
- Authorities criticised -
A medic in El Kala said 72 people had been admitted to the city's hospital, where nine had died and another nine remained in intensive care.
Associations across Algeria called for donations of money and medical supplies to help the victims.
The fire service said Thursday afternoon that 1,700 firefighters had been deployed to battle the fires, of which 24 were still raging.
A journalist in the mountainous area of Souk Ahras told AFP that a huge blaze in a forest nearby had sparked panic in the city of half a million people, where nearly 100 women and 17 newborn babies had to be evacuated from a hospital.
The scenes were reminiscent of fires last year which killed at least 90 people and seared 100,000 hectares (247,000 acres) of forest and farmland in the country's north.
That disaster provoked criticism of authorities over the lack of firefighting aircraft.
Algeria had agreed to buy seven such aircraft from Spanish firm Plysa, but cancelled the contract following a diplomatic row over the Western Sahara in late June, according to specialist website Mena Defense.
Authorities have rented a Russian water bomber, but it broke down and is not expected to be operational again until Saturday, Interior Minister Kamel Beldjoud said.
The civil protection service and the army have access to several firefighting helicopters.
- 'The forest is weakened' -
Experts have called for a major effort to bolster the firefighting capacity of Africa's biggest country, which has more than four million hectares of forest.
One specialist, who asked not to be named, told AFP that in the 1980s the country had 22 Grumman aircraft for battling forest fires but that they had been "sold on the cheap, without any alternative solution being proposed".
Since early August, fires have destroyed more than 800 hectares of forest and 1,800 hectares of woodlands, according to Beldjoud.
On Thursday, Prime Minister Aimene Benabderrahmane defended the government's response, saying that the country had ordered four new firefighting aircraft -- but that they would not be available until December.
He added that strong winds had exacerbated the blazes and said authorities were "deploying all their means" to extinguish them.
He said bad land management had added to the problem.
"Today, the forest is weakened. It has been chipped away at," he said.
F.AbuShamala--SF-PST