Drone footage shows devastation after wildfires ravage Turkey's pine
forests
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[August 09, 2021]
By Mehmet Emin Caliskan
ICMELER, Turkey (Reuters) - Until
devastated by wildfires, hills near the Turkish sea resort of Marmaris
were decked in thick green pine forest. Now these same hills form a
ghostly, grey-brown landscape topped with blackened tree stumps as
though sketched in charcoal.
Drone footage from the small tourist seaside town of Icmeler near
Marmaris from before and after what President Tayyip Erdogan has called
Turkey's worst wildfires shows the extent of the devastation.
In the last two weeks, the fires have wrought damage on tens of
thousands of hectares of forest in Turkey's Mediterranean and Aegean
provinces, killed eight people and forced thousands of people including
tourists to flee.
Similar damage could be seen in before and after drone footage of the
village of Bayir and the seaside resort of Turunc, also in the province
of Mugla where both Marmaris and Bodrum, another major resort, are
located.
Forestry Minister Bekir Pakdemirli said on Monday that the only
wildfires continuing to burn were in the Mugla districts of Milas and
Koycegiz, with nearly 240 blazes brought under control in the last 13
days.
Mugla municipality has said 55,000 hectares have been burnt - more than
twice the area burnt across the whole of Turkey last year - and 36,000
people evacuated.
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Vegetation fires burn behind the hotel in Icmeler, near Marmaris,
Turkey July 31, 2021 in this still image obtained from a social
media video. Hakan Gurcan/via REUTERS
Strong winds, low humidity and temperatures above 40
degrees Celsius (104°F) have contributed to the spread of the fires.
Fire-fighting efforts involved 15 planes, 64 helicopters and 5,250
personnel, Pakdemirli said.
The U.N. climate panel sounded a dire warning Monday, saying the
world is dangerously close to runaway warming and humans are
"unequivocally" to blame, with greenhouse gas levels high enough to
guarantee climate disruption for decades.
The 1.1-degree Celsius warming already recorded has been enough to
unleash disastrous weather, including the wildfires in Turkey,
Greece and the U.S. West.
(Reporting by Mehmet Emin Caliskan and Yesim Dikmen; Writing by
Daren Butler; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)
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