Cause of fire likely negligence
THE cause of the worst forest fire in Israel's history is likely negligence, not arson, authorities said yesterday, as firefighters from around the world battled the blaze whipping through northern pine forests toward the Mediterranean.
A spokesman for Israel's police would not go into detail about the kind of negligence or explain why authorities were now leaning away from earlier suspicions of arson until further investigation had been carried out.
By midday yesterday, firefighters still had not brought the blaze under control, said the spokesman, Micky Rosenfeld.
The fires burning north of the city of Haifa began on Thursday, killing 41 people - most of them prison guards whose bus was engulfed by flames while they were on their way to evacuate a prison. The fires have forced the evacuation of 17,000 people.
The blaze was burning through the Carmel Forest, a prized area of woodland, sending a dark cloud of ash over much of northern Israel.
Israel's small firefighting force was overwhelmed, and the country sent out an unprecedented call for international help. Aircraft from Turkey, Greece, Cyprus and Britain were dumping sea water and flame retardant over the area.
Two more communities were evacuated yesterday morning. Some residents refused to go and pleaded with firefighters for help save their homes. One woman in the small artist community of Ein Hod desperately tried to protect her home from the encroaching flames with only a garden hose.
Residents of a nearby farming village were also ordered to leave. Above them, small planes swooped and dumped orange fire retardant and sea water over tracts of dry pines that were lit in flames.
US planes laden with equipment were expected to land late yesterday, alongside planes sent from New York City's firefighting department, a military official said.
Fewer than half of those killed had been identified by late Friday because bodies had been burned beyond recognition, officials said.
The cadet prison guards were from some of Israel's diverse communities: Arabs, Israelis of Russian and Ethiopian descent, working class Jews of Middle Eastern descent. They included young women about to be married and men who left behind widows.
The fire had burned about 40 square kilometers of land - at least half of that national forest, said Hanan Goder of the Foreign Ministry, which is partly coordinating the response to the fire.
While small by international standards, the loss of the verdant forest was keenly felt in Israel, where only 7 percent of the land is wooded.
A spokesman for Israel's police would not go into detail about the kind of negligence or explain why authorities were now leaning away from earlier suspicions of arson until further investigation had been carried out.
By midday yesterday, firefighters still had not brought the blaze under control, said the spokesman, Micky Rosenfeld.
The fires burning north of the city of Haifa began on Thursday, killing 41 people - most of them prison guards whose bus was engulfed by flames while they were on their way to evacuate a prison. The fires have forced the evacuation of 17,000 people.
The blaze was burning through the Carmel Forest, a prized area of woodland, sending a dark cloud of ash over much of northern Israel.
Israel's small firefighting force was overwhelmed, and the country sent out an unprecedented call for international help. Aircraft from Turkey, Greece, Cyprus and Britain were dumping sea water and flame retardant over the area.
Two more communities were evacuated yesterday morning. Some residents refused to go and pleaded with firefighters for help save their homes. One woman in the small artist community of Ein Hod desperately tried to protect her home from the encroaching flames with only a garden hose.
Residents of a nearby farming village were also ordered to leave. Above them, small planes swooped and dumped orange fire retardant and sea water over tracts of dry pines that were lit in flames.
US planes laden with equipment were expected to land late yesterday, alongside planes sent from New York City's firefighting department, a military official said.
Fewer than half of those killed had been identified by late Friday because bodies had been burned beyond recognition, officials said.
The cadet prison guards were from some of Israel's diverse communities: Arabs, Israelis of Russian and Ethiopian descent, working class Jews of Middle Eastern descent. They included young women about to be married and men who left behind widows.
The fire had burned about 40 square kilometers of land - at least half of that national forest, said Hanan Goder of the Foreign Ministry, which is partly coordinating the response to the fire.
While small by international standards, the loss of the verdant forest was keenly felt in Israel, where only 7 percent of the land is wooded.
- About Us
- |
- Terms of Use
- |
-
RSS
- |
- Privacy Policy
- |
- Contact Us
- |
- Shanghai Call Center: 962288
- |
- Tip-off hotline: 52920043
- 沪ICP证:沪ICP备05050403号-1
- |
- 互联网新闻信息服务许可证:31120180004
- |
- 网络视听许可证:0909346
- |
- 广播电视节目制作许可证:沪字第354号
- |
- 增值电信业务经营许可证:沪B2-20120012
Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.