At Least 30 Killed Fighting Mountain Forest Fire in China

At Least 30 Killed Fighting Mountain Forest Fire in China
A forest blaze rages on in a remote mountainous region of Qinhuangdao, northeast China's Hebei Province on April 13, 2011. The forest fire destroyed over 133 hectares of forest, according to local authorities. STR/AFP/Getty Images
The Associated Press
Updated:

BEIJING—A fire high in the mountains of western China’s Sichuan Province has killed at least 30 firefighters and others, the Chinese regime said on April 1.

The deaths occurred after a change of wind Sunday as the firefighters were battling the blaze in a rugged area at an altitude of 12,500 feet, according to the Ministry of Emergency Management and the military. Among the dead were 27 firefighters and three local residents recruited to help fight the blaze, the ministry said.

Nearly 700 people were battling the fire in Sichuan’s Muli county that erupted on Saturday, but contact was lost on Sunday with at least 30. Two helicopters carrying medical staff and military personnel were dispatched to help in the search.

China has been battling forest fires in recent weeks in various parts of the vast country, including on the outskirts of Beijing, fed by dry weather and high winds across many northern areas.

The death toll among the firefighters appeared to be the worst since 2015, when an explosion at a chemical warehouse in the port city of Tianjin killed 173 people, most of them firefighters and other first responders. That blast was blamed on illegal construction and unsafe storage of volatile materials.
Scores of workers have also died in recent industrial accidents, including 85 in a pair of explosions last month.