Forest Fires Rage in Three Governorates in Syria

Photo: AFP
Photo: AFP
TT

Forest Fires Rage in Three Governorates in Syria

Photo: AFP
Photo: AFP

In the past two days, fires broke out in the governates of Homs, Tartus, and Latakia, burning swathes of land amid failure to contain them.

Raed Ibrahim, the mayor of Haffah in northeastern Latakia, warned on Friday of a “major disaster” if the fires reached the Agricultural Bank.

In statements to Al-Watan newspaper, Ibrahim appealed to authorities to send more firefighters and helicopters to extinguish the fire before the whole town burns down.

Syrian state television on Saturday morning broadcast scenes from the affected areas, where firefighters were working to extinguish the blazes.

Syria's Agriculture Minister Mohammed Hassan Qatana said dozens of fires were burning, including “45 in Latakia and 33 in Tartus.”

The Latakia fire brigade said they were “facing the largest series of fires seen in Latakia province in years.”

The Health Ministry said two people had died in Latakia province since Friday as a result of the fires, and that 70 people were taken to hospital suffering breathing difficulties.

Fires heavily damaged a building in Qardahah used as a storage for the state-owned tobacco company, part of which collapsed. The town’s local hospital was also surrounded by flames, according to local media reports.

While the fires reached large swathes of lands in Homs, Tartus, and Latakia countryside, the Russian forces stood idle.

Pro-regime residents expressed frustration towards the government performance and accused it of negligence. They also denounced the failure of Russia to rescue them, amid accusations that the fires were planned.

In response to these accusations, the authorities ordered investigating the reason behind the fires and handing over any possible committers to the competent authority.

Some Facebook pages, that are backed by the regime security forces, posed charges to terrorist groups affiliated with the opposition of standing behind the retaliation fires in pro-regime regions.



Israel Considers Transferring Control of Gaza’s Rafah Crossing to EU, Palestinians

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (dpa)
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (dpa)
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Israel Considers Transferring Control of Gaza’s Rafah Crossing to EU, Palestinians

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (dpa)
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (dpa)

Israeli authorities are considering transferring control of Gaza’s Rafah crossing to the European Union and Palestinians, informed sources said on Thursday.
Though Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has scorned the idea of Israel ceding the crossing, Israeli officials were in talks with the EU and the US about the proposal, the sources told Bloomberg.
If enacted, the proposal could foreshadow an end to the conflict between Israel and Hamas and enable more aid to get into the devastated Palestinian territory, said the sources, who asked not to be identified discussing the sensitive talks.
The negotiations underscore the EU’s renewed diplomatic efforts to relieve some pressure on Palestinian civilians and help stop the war.
The bloc has for months called for a truce but had little influence over the Israeli government as it tries to destroy Hamas.
The EU helped run the crossing before 2007, when Hamas took control over the Gaza Strip.
Netanyahu said that whatever Israel does, Hamas won’t be allowed to retake control of any border areas. His government also insists on Israel’s forces remaining in the vicinity of the crossing and along the Gaza-Egypt border.
After a visit to Rafah on Thursday, Netanyahu said it was “vital” to hold the Philadelphi Corridor and the Rafah crossing.
Last May, the Israeli army launched a military operation in the southern Gaza city of Rafah, capturing the Rafah crossing on the Palestinian side and deploying its forces throughout the so-called Philadelphi Corridor that runs for 14 kilometers along the border with Egypt.
Earlier on Thursday, Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty renewed his call for Israel’s army withdrawal from the Rafah crossing and for the Palestinian Authority to run the terminal.