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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Bethan McKernan

The photo that has come to define Turkey’s wildfires

A child on a beach watches smoke from wildfires in Turkey.
A child on a beach watches smoke from wildfires in Turkey. Photograph: Mishka Bochkaryov

A little boy ready for a swim stops on the edge of the clear water, his gaze distracted by a firefighting plane flying low through a rust-red sky. For many, the photo – apparently taken by a Ukrainian holidaymaker in Antalya last week – has come to symbolise the destruction wreaked by the ferocious wildfires that have consumed Turkey’s Mediterranean coastline over the past eight days.

More than 180 fires have killed eight people, devastated vast swathes of pine forest and agricultural land. On Wednesday fire crept closer to a thermal power plant as international firefighting teams used helicopters and water cannon and dug trenches to slow the spread of the flames.

The Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, faces a rising tide of anger from the Turkish public over his government’s slow and lacklustre response to the disaster. His Justice and Development party was already struggling in the polls as a result of the country’s economic troubles.

The photograph has been shared widely by Turkish social media users, many of whom are reeling from the unprecedented wildfires, which experts say have been caused by the climate crisis and incompetent management from Ankara’s forestry department.

“May Allah curse those who turned our paradise into a hell,” one user commented.

• This article was amended on 8 August 2021 to correct the nationality of the photographer to Ukrainian.

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