Pauri,
Tehri, Nainital, Rudraprayag, Chamoli, Uttarkashi, Almora and
Pithoragarh are the worst hit areas. (Picture for representation only.)
Nova Wahyudi/Antara Foto/Reuters
Devastating fires are raging in the forests of the North Indian state
of Uttarakhand for the past 88 days. So far, nearly 3,000 hectares of
forests have been destroyed and seven people killed. The government has
deployed 6,000 firemen to tackle the blaze.
The personnel include teams from the National Disaster Response force, the State Disaster Response Force and the Army, NDTV reported.
The personnel include teams from the National Disaster Response force, the State Disaster Response Force and the Army, NDTV reported.
Fires
have been spotted in more than 1,200 places in one month. Pauri, Tehri,
Nainital, Rudraprayag, Chamoli, Uttarkashi, Almora and Pithoragarh are
the worst hit areas.
Senior officials told NDTV that they brace
themselves for forest fires every summer but the areas affected are
growing in number each year. "Forest fires are directly related to the
weather and rising temperature. Most of the fire incidents in
Uttarakhand have thus far been man-made," said Rajendra Kumar, Chief
Principal Conservator of Forests.
Uttarakhand Chief Secretary Shatrughn Singh said: "An Mi-17 chopper
of the IAF has been stationed near Bhimtal and it will spray water from
the Bhimtal lake," The Hindu reported.
The federal environment minister, Prakash Javadekar,
announced several measures to control the situation including,
allocation of Rs 50m (£5.15m) for firefighting operations.
Official data for Uttarakhand shows that the area under
forest fires has more than doubled this year. It has already passed
2,000 hectares compared to 930.3 acres in 2015.
One of the reasons cited by officials is the presence of
pine trees in 18% of the forests. "Since the British period there has
been a monoculture of pine trees in many forests of Uttarakhand. Their
leaves can catch fire easily," Vinod Pande, a retired forest officer,
said. He added: "The illicit timber trade relies on pine forests since
it is used for construction."
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