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Fires in Peru destroy crops, threaten archaeological sites


This photo released by the Peruvian Ministry of Defense shows Civil Defense members, firefighters, and volunteers try to extinguish a fire in the Amazon Region in northern Peru, Sept. 16, 2024. (Peruvian Ministry of Defense via AFP)
This photo released by the Peruvian Ministry of Defense shows Civil Defense members, firefighters, and volunteers try to extinguish a fire in the Amazon Region in northern Peru, Sept. 16, 2024. (Peruvian Ministry of Defense via AFP)

Peruvian authorities scrambled to roll out a plan to fight fires raging out of control across the nation, razing crops, damaging archaeological treasures, and leaving several regions in a state of disaster on Thursday.

Firefighters said battling the blazes has grown increasingly difficult.

"We're tired," said a volunteer firefighter in the forests of the northern Amazonas region who declined to give his name. "We put the fire out, it lights back up. We put it out, the fire breaks out again."

Firefighters in the area retreated from the flames on Thursday.

"They're out of control," said Arturo Morales, another volunteer firefighter. "We need help."

President Dina Boluarte on Wednesday declared a 60-day state of emergency in the San Martin, Amazonas and Ucayali regions, allocating extra resources to stop the fires from spreading.

"We're rolling out everything we have," Boluarte said in a speech. She called on farmers to stop burning grasslands, which she said caused flames to spread out of control.

Forest fires in Peru are frequent from August to November, either caused by farmers or those who are looking to illegally take over land, according to the government.

Around 240 fires have broken out this season in 22 of the country's 25 regions, though more than 80% had been controlled by Wednesday.

Some, however, are threatening to spark up again with dry weather, winds and their remote locations making them difficult to access.

The flames have reached seven archaeological sites, according to the culture ministry, and are threatening the Indigenous Shipibo-Konibo community in the Amazon.

In total, nearly 2,300 hectares of farmland have burned and 140 people have been injured, according to official data through Wednesday.

South America is being ravaged by fire from Brazil's Amazon rainforest through the world's largest wetlands to dry forests in Bolivia, breaking a previous record for the number of blazes seen in a year.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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