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Zenger News Desk

Algerian President Declares Three-Day Mourning For Wildfire Victims

Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune on Aug 11 announced a three-day mourning for the people who lost their lives in the wildfires that keep raging across the country. (Adam Berry/Getty Images)

The minister assured that the government would compensate all residents who suffered material losses from the wildfires.

He said the government would send a delegation of 140 experts to the province of Tizi Ouzou to assess the extent of damages and losses. 

The fact that some fires are man-made worsens the situation, the officials said. The authorities are currently working on assisting an unspecified number of victims.

Algeria is one of several countries in the Mediterranean region, such as Greece, Cyprus, and Turkey, currently dealing with intense wildfires. 

Human-induced climate change is making heatwaves more likely and more severe, scientists say.

The European Union’s  Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service  said the emissions and intensity of wildfires are rapidly increasing in Turkey and Southern Italy. Countries like Morocco, Albania, Greece, North Macedonia, and Lebanon are also affected.

The service monitors wildfires through satellites and ground-based observation statements.

“With Southeast Europe currently experiencing heatwave conditions, the fire danger remains high in the area, especially across much of Turkey and around the Mediterranean,” the organization said in a statement on Aug. 4, 2021.

“CAMS data show that the daily total  Fire Radiative Power  for Turkey has reached unprecedented values ​​in the entire dataset, which goes back to 2003.”

Scientists at the organization said that the wildfires are emitting large amounts of smoke pollution into the atmosphere. Heatwave conditions are further increasing the fire danger in this area.

We are closely monitoring the intensity of fires in Turkey and around the Mediterranean area and the impacts they are having on the atmosphere,” Mark Parrington, senior scientist and wildfire expert at the organization.

“It is essential to closely watch these high-intensity fires as the smoke they emit can have impacts on air quality locally and downwind.”

This is not unusual for this time of the year. However, the area’s heatwaves provide the perfect grounds for fires to spread in case of ignition, said the organization.

(With inputs from ANI)

Edited by Amrita Das and Kipchumba Some

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