Fires
destroy more than 4.2 million wild acres in Bolivia
By Jessie
Yeung, CNN
Updated
0421 GMT (1221 HKT) September 9, 2019
'All you
can see is death.' Aerial tour of Amazon fires reveals endless devastation
(CNN)It's not just the Brazilian Amazon
burning -- fires in Bolivia have ravaged more than 1.7 million hectares (4.2
million acres) of land, according to Bolivian officials. That's more than
double the damage from just two weeks ago.
Fires are
leaving blackened trees and ash-covered forest floors in their wake. The
website of Bolivia's Santa Cruz region described finding charred animals in its
devastated lands, and others desperately searching for food and water.
The
majority of fires are in protected natural areas and in forests, according to
environmental secretary Cinthia Asin on Wednesday, calling for the federal
government to declare a national disaster.
"We
insist on a national declaration of disaster, because we are losing a great
part of our biodiversity that is also a water provider," she said.
.
Thousands
of firefighters, park rangers, state employees, and volunteers are on the front
lines fighting the fires, but new fires keep starting and spreading, she said.
The fires
have claimed two lives so far, according to Bolivian President Evo Morales. He
tweeted earlier this week the names of Jorge Hinojoza Vega and police officer
Lucio Mamani, whom he said had died while putting out fires in the city of
Sacaba and the town of Coroico, respectively.
Other state
and departmental officials like the Secretary of Energy, Mines, and
Hydrocarbons and the Secretary General of Santa Cruz are now also putting
pressure on the Bolivian government to declare a national disaster.
But the
Bolivian minister of communication Manuel Canelas said that Bolivia "is
not overwhelmed" in terms of economic or technical resources that would
merit a disaster declaration, according to CNN Espanol.
The
Bolivian government has already hired one of the largest planes in the world, a
Boeing 747 Supertanker, and a fleet of smaller ones to put out the fires in
late August. There has also been international assistance -- neighboring
Argentina deployed firefighters to help, Peru sent helicopters, and the United
States sent tools and equipment for 2,000 firefighters to Bolivia on Thursday,
according to the Santa Cruz government.
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