Wildfire rages on Turkish coast where officials warned of vulnerabilities

Wildfire rages on Turkish coast where officials warned of vulnerabilities
A firefighting helicopter drops water on a wildfire near Marmaris, a town in Turkey’s Mugla province. (Reuters)
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Updated 24 June 2022
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Wildfire rages on Turkish coast where officials warned of vulnerabilities

Wildfire rages on Turkish coast where officials warned of vulnerabilities
  • More than 2,500 firefighters, aided by water-dropping planes and helicopters, were deployed to fight the blaze that erupted on Tuesday in the Bordubet region

ISTANBUL: Firefighters were tackling a wildfire for a third day on Friday in southwest Turkey, where municipal officials have warned that national authorities are unprepared even after last year’s devastating fires revealed a lack of planes and personnel.
Scenes of burning woodland near the Aegean coastal resort of Marmaris since Tuesday have sparked fears of a repeat of last year’s fires that ravaged some 140,000 hectares (345,950 acres) across the region.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government was criticized by local residents and opposition parties for being unprepared to fight last year’s fires. It responded by saying the wildfires were the worst in Turkey’s history.
Officials from Marmaris and the nearby resort Bodrum, both of which experienced the worst of the fires last year, have said the government is not sufficiently prepared this year either.
Marmaris municipal council member Ali Kirli said last year’s fires should have been considered “warning flares” to prepare better for this summer. “The fire season is approaching, but there are no planes in the air, there are no workers on the ground,” he told Reuters before the fire broke out on Tuesday.
“Fire-fighting planes and helicopters should be purchased, and a fleet of aircraft should be established.”
Marmaris Mayor Mehmet Oktay said the region was allocated one helicopter as of May and asked for an increase. Since the fire began, he has requested night-vision helicopters to tackle the flames at night, a demand echoed by Bodrum Mayor Ahmet Aras.
Aras also said planes should be deployed to the area and fire brigades should be strengthened.
The government has denied the accusations that it was unprepared this year, with Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu accusing the opposition of spreading lies. Kirli, Oktay and Aras are all from the opposition CHP.
The forestry authority’s budget was raised by 220 percent from last year to 2.4 billion lira ($138.15 million) and officials say night-vision helicopters are due to be delivered in July.