Fires Destroy Thousands of Hectares of Spain Forests

Wildfires advance in Almonaster la Real in Huelva, Spain, Thursday Aug. 27, 2020. (A.Perez, Europa Press via AP)
Wildfires advance in Almonaster la Real in Huelva, Spain, Thursday Aug. 27, 2020. (A.Perez, Europa Press via AP)
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Fires Destroy Thousands of Hectares of Spain Forests

Wildfires advance in Almonaster la Real in Huelva, Spain, Thursday Aug. 27, 2020. (A.Perez, Europa Press via AP)
Wildfires advance in Almonaster la Real in Huelva, Spain, Thursday Aug. 27, 2020. (A.Perez, Europa Press via AP)

The wildfires that broke out in Huelva, southwest of Spain, have destroyed around 10,000 hectares of forests- an area equivalent to more than 14,000 football fields.

The local authorities said Monday that around 3,200 people fled the fire in the province, local media reported.

The residents of Almonaster la Real, a town of 1900 people, have been hard hit by the fires. The town is located in a mountainous area about 40 kilometers east of the Portuguese border and 100 kilometers northwest of Seville.

According to reports, the army assisted more than 500 firefighters to end the fires with the help of 24 helicopters and aircraft.

"They hope a weather change, with less wind and air, could enhance local efforts to extinguish fires. But the fires are still out of control," a spokesman for the fire department told Europa Press.

Over the weekend, a separate fire destroyed some 300 hectares of forest in the Murcia region in eastern Spain.

The latest official figures indicate that fires caused relatively little damage in Spain this year, before the Huelva fire broke out.

By mid-August, the fires had destroyed 31,000 hectares, less than half of the 72,000 hectares destroyed by fires in 2019.

The average area destroyed by fires over the past ten years until mid-August was about 63,000 hectares.



Tokyo Hospital Opens City's First 'Baby Hatch'

People use boats on Chidorigafuchi, one of the moats around the Imperial Palace, to look at cherry blossoms as the blossom viewing season begins in full in central Tokyo on March 31, 2025. (Photo by Richard A. Brooks / AFP)
People use boats on Chidorigafuchi, one of the moats around the Imperial Palace, to look at cherry blossoms as the blossom viewing season begins in full in central Tokyo on March 31, 2025. (Photo by Richard A. Brooks / AFP)
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Tokyo Hospital Opens City's First 'Baby Hatch'

People use boats on Chidorigafuchi, one of the moats around the Imperial Palace, to look at cherry blossoms as the blossom viewing season begins in full in central Tokyo on March 31, 2025. (Photo by Richard A. Brooks / AFP)
People use boats on Chidorigafuchi, one of the moats around the Imperial Palace, to look at cherry blossoms as the blossom viewing season begins in full in central Tokyo on March 31, 2025. (Photo by Richard A. Brooks / AFP)

A Tokyo hospital on Monday became the Japanese capital's first medical institution to offer a system allowing the safe, anonymous drop-off of infants by parents unable to raise them.

Used for centuries globally, so-called baby boxes or baby hatches are meant to prevent child abandonment or abuse.

But they have been criticized for violating a child's right to know their parents, and are also sometimes described by anti-abortion activists as a solution for desperate mothers.

Newborns within four weeks of age can now be placed in a basket in a quiet room with a discreet entrance at a hospital in Tokyo run by the Christian foundation Sanikukai, AFP reported.

The scheme, open 24 hours a day, is meant to be an "emergency, last-resort measure" to save babies' lives, Hitoshi Kato, head of Sanikukai Hospital, told a news conference.

There are still "mothers and babies with nowhere to go", the hospital said in a statement, citing the "abandonment of infants in baggage lockers, parks or beaches".

Sanikukai is only Japan's second medical institution to open a baby hatch, after the Catholic-run Jikei hospital in southwestern Japan's Kumamoto region opened one in 2007.

At Sanikukai in Tokyo, when a baby is put in the basket, a motion sensor immediately alerts hospital staffers to the drop-off, sending them rushing downstairs to tend to the baby, project leader Hiroshi Oe told AFP.

After confirming the baby's safety, the hospital will work with authorities to help decide the "best possible" next step, including foster care or a children's home.

If the person leaving the baby is seen lingering around the hospital, efforts will be made to engage them, Oe said.