After France and Portugal, Algeria is not spared by the fires.

At least 26 people died and several dozen were injured in forest fires that affected 14 departments in the north of the country, Algerian Interior Minister Kamel Beldjoud announced on the evening of Wednesday August 17.

"Twenty-six people died: two in Sétif (east) and 24 in El Tarf (east)", near the border with Tunisia, he said during the 8 p.m. news (1900 GMT) .

Several people suffer from burns or breathing difficulties, but no new figures have been given on the number of injured.

Displaced families, closed roads

A previous report from civil protection reported four people burned to varying degrees and 41 others suffering from breathing difficulties in Souk Ahras, another town bordering Tunisia.

Impressive images showed residents of this city fleeing their homes in the face of the flames. 

According to local media, more than 350 families have fled their homes in Souk Ahras.

The gendarmerie closed several roads because of the fires. 

"Thirty-nine fires in 14 wilayas (prefectures) are in progress", indicated the civil protection, specifying that the wilaya of El Tarf records the greatest number of fires, with 16 fires including a good number still in progress. .

Water bomber helicopters intervened in three prefectures, including Souk Ahras.

More than a hundred fires in August

Since the beginning of August, 106 fires have broken out, destroying 800 hectares of forest and 1,800 hectares of coppice, said the Minister of the Interior.

"Some of these fires are caused," said Kamel Beldjoud.

The largest country in Africa, Algeria has only 4.1 million hectares of forest, with a meager reforestation rate of 1.76%.

Each year, the north of the country is affected by forest fires, but this phenomenon is accentuated from year to year under the effect also of climate change. 

The summer of 2021 has been the deadliest.

At least 90 people died in forest fires that ravaged the north of the country, where more than 100,000 hectares of coppice went up in smoke.

Climate warming increases the likelihood of heat waves and droughts and, by extension, fires.

With AFP

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