Syria battles forest fires for third day as Turkiye sends help

This handout picture released by the Syrian Arab News Agency’s (SANA) telegram page shows a bulldozer attemping to contain a wildfire sweeping through Qatal Maaf in the Latakia province in Syria’s Mediterranean West on July 4, 2025. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 05 July 2025
Follow

Syria battles forest fires for third day as Turkiye sends help

  • Syria’s ministry for emergencies and disaster management said teams from Turkiye began helping on Saturday morning
  • Syria’s civil defense said a volunteer firefighter suffered from smoke inhalation

QASTAL MA’AF, Syria: Syrian emergency workers were battling forest fires raging in the coastal province of Latakia on Saturday for a third day in tough conditions as neighboring Turkiye sent assistance.

An AFP correspondent saw strong winds fanning the flames in forest areas and farmland in Qastal Maaf, around a dozen kilometers (eight miles) from the Turkish border, as residents continued to flee with what they could carry.

Some residential areas in the region were evacuated a day earlier.

Syria’s ministry for emergencies and disaster management said teams from Turkiye began helping on Saturday morning “as part of regional coordination to face the fires,” with the assistance including two aircraft and eight fire trucks.

Turkiye, a key supporter of Syria’s new authorities, has been battling its own fires in recent days, including near the Syrian border.

The AFP correspondent saw helicopters bearing the Turkish flag flying over Qastal Maaf assisting firefighters on the ground.

Syria’s civil defense said a volunteer firefighter suffered from smoke inhalation and a service vehicle caught fire.

More than 60 Syrian civil defense and other teams were fighting fires across several areas of Latakia province, the ministry said.

It cited “very difficult conditions, with the explosion of war remnants and mines,” strong winds and high temperatures, adding that mountainous terrain was hampering efforts to reach some blazes.

More than six months after the ousting of longtime ruler Bashar Assad, Syria is still reeling from more than a decade of civil war that also left munitions and ordnance scattered across the country.

With man-made climate change increasing the likelihood and intensity of droughts and wildfires worldwide, Syria has also been battered by heatwaves, low rainfall and major forest fires.

In June, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization told AFP that Syria had “not seen such bad climate conditions in 60 years.”


Algeria archbishop welcomes pope visit as ‘dream come true’

Franco-Algerian cardinal Jean-Paul Vesco leaves after a congregation meeting at The Vatican, on May 6, 2025. (AFP)
Updated 5 sec ago
Follow

Algeria archbishop welcomes pope visit as ‘dream come true’

  • French-language newspaper El Watan said the “symbolic” visit was “of great historical significance in a country where ancient Christian memory coexists with the Muslim reality of today”

ALGIERS: Pope Leo XIV’s newly announced visit to Algeria in April has been welcomed as a dream come true by the archbishop of Algiers.
The trip will mark the first time a head of the Catholic Church has visited the North African Muslim-majority country.
“This dream of a pope visiting Algeria ... has come true!” Jean-Paul Vesco, the Franco Algerian cardinal of the Catholic Church who serves as the Archbishop of Algiers, wrote in a statement.
He added that the pontiff had come to see “the Algeria of today, a meeting point between north and south, east and west, the West and the Arab-Muslim world.”

SPEEDREAD

The Algerian presidency said the pope’s trip reflected Algeria and the Vatican’s ‘shared belief in the need to build a world based on peace, dialogue, and justice, against the various challenges currently facing humanity.’

French-language newspaper El Watan said the “symbolic” visit was “of great historical significance in a country where ancient Christian memory coexists with the Muslim reality of today.”
Arabic-language newspaper El Khabar agreed that the visit, announced by the Vatican on Tuesday, “carries a great symbolic and spiritual dimension.”
For Leo, the trip is in honor of fifth-century Saint Augustine, who was born in modern-day Algeria and whose order he follows.
Leo, who was elected in May last year, will visit the capital Algiers and the city of Annaba — where the Basilica of Saint Augustine stands — from April 13 to 15.
The 70-year-old pontiff said the trip would allow him to “continue the discourse of dialogue and bridge-building between the Christian and the Muslim worlds.”
After Algeria, the pope will visit Cameroon, Angola and Equatorial Guinea.