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Interior Minister Carolina Tohá said in a news conference late Saturday that the country was facing its deadliest tragedy since a 2010 earthquake that killed more than 500 people.
Across the country, some 92 fires were burning Saturday, and responders had managed to control 40 of them. The blazes have spread to at least 43,000 hectares, or more than 106,000 acres, Tohá said earlier in the day.
While the surface area is smaller than the area affected by forest fires in the country in February last year, Tohá said the blazes are expected to multiply quickly. The biggest concern, she said, is that many of the fires are inching very close to urban areas.
Authorities are investigating suspected arson connected to the fires. “While it is difficult to imagine who would be willing to cause so much tragedy and so much pain, know that we will investigate,” Boric said in a televised address.
Authorities have not yet provided details on those who died in the blazes. The official death toll rose late Saturday after a number of bodies were found on roads. Tohá said it was expected to rise again in the coming hours.
“We don’t have concrete numbers, but we know that thousands of households were affected” by the fire, she said.
At least 1,000 homes had been damaged in the Valparaíso region, according to estimates from Chilean disaster agency Senapred. Hillside neighborhoods around the coastal resort city of Viña del Mar were among those hardest hit.
The president decreed a curfew in the area to help free up routes for emergency vehicles and to allow people to evacuate.
Wildfires are relatively common in Chile during the summer months. The peak fire season typically begins in early December and lasts several months.
This year, a change to the El Niño weather pattern — which causes rising sea temperatures near South America — has led to soaring temperatures and heat waves across the region, including in the Chilean capital, Santiago.
Colombia’s government last month asked for international help to combat raging wildfires.
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