Tens Of Thousands Flee Western Canada Wildfires

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Residents of western Canada scrambled to evacuate Saturday as raging wildfires encroached on two metropolitan areas — separate blazes that have sent tens of thousands fleeing over the course of just days.
The devastating fires in British Columbia and the Northwest Territories are just the latest in a summer of dramatic wildfires across the country that have left millions of acres scorched.
According to estimates, 19,000 people were evacuated from Yellowknife, the Northwest Territories capital, over 48 hours, its environment minister Shane Thompson said late Friday.
The city, home to some 20,000, was largely a ghost town following the largest ever evacuation from the region.
Winds have been fanning the wildfires towards Yellowknife, but Saturday there was some relief after overnight rain brought a sharp dip in temperatures, government weather forecasts showed.
More than 2,000 kilometers (1,200 miles) south in British Columbia, fire also bore down on Kelowna, a city of 150,000 people in the Okanagan Valley.
Blazes have already destroyed several properties in West Kelowna, separated by Okanagan Lake from its larger, eponymous neighbor.
Among them is the Lake Okanagan Resort, according to local media, which is known for having hosted high-profile politicians such as British prime minister Margaret Thatcher.
Exceedingly thick smoke meanwhile made it difficult for many in the area to breathe.
Overall, the number of people under evacuation order in British Columbia was 15,000, Emergency Management Minister Bowinn Ma said.
READ ALSO: More Than 26,000 Ordered To Flee As Tenerife Wildfire Rages
 ‘Sad and depressed’ 
The blazes have caused “terrible loss,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told reporters after meeting evacuees from Yellowknife as they arrived in Edmonton, Alberta, with no idea when they may return home.
Of the 19,000 who fled Yellowknife, “over 15,000 traveled out by road and 3,800 have been airlifted, with approximately 1,000 essential staff remaining in the city and surrounding area,” environmental minister Thompson posted on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter.
Those crews were remaining to erect defenses from the flames, while water bombers have been seen flying low over the city, with the Canadian military also helping out.
Tony Whitford, a former commissioner for the Northwestern Territories and a longtime resident of Yellowknife, arrived in the city of Calgary on one of the first flights out and gave the evacuation high marks.
“My compliments to them all,” Whitford, who is 82 and wheelchair-bound, said of the organizers. “It’s so complex — 20,000 people — it’s incredible. It went smoothly.”
Several towns and Indigenous communities were evacuated earlier. The exodus from Yellowknife means half the population of the near-Arctic territory has been displaced.
Martha Kanatsiak, who has lived in Yellowknife for 28 years, arrived late Friday in Calgary.
“I’m okay, but I feel sad and depressed and worried. I never saw something like this,” the 59-year-old Inuit retiree told AFP.
Some 40 flights carrying around 3,500 passengers from Yellowknife have arrived in Calgary, said officials in the city, which has made nearly 500 hotel rooms available.
Meanwhile, across the border in the United States, several thousand people were forced to flee wildfires in Washington state, with at least one death reported, local media said.
Some 185 structures have burned in and around the eastern Washington town of Medical Lake, with high temperatures and fierce winds complicating firefighters’ work, according to the Spokesman-Review of Spokane.
Canada is experiencing a record-setting wildfire season, with official estimates of over 14.0 million hectares (34.6 million acres) already burned — almost twice the area of the last record of 7.3 million hectares. Four people have died so far.
In addition, the fires have emitted an unprecedented amount of carbon dioxide.
Scientists say human-caused global warming is exacerbating natural hazards, making them both more frequent and more deadly.
AFP

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