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Chile wildfires rage for third day, entire towns wiped out

The blazes started Saturday in the Nuble and Biobio regions - about 500km south of the capital Santiago - and have since ripped through an area the size of the US city of Detroit.

rakesh by rakesh
22/01/2026
in News
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Chile wildfires rage for third day, entire towns wiped out

Fire scientists say the blazes are being driven not only by extreme heat, drought and wind, but also by how human-shaped landscapes interact with changing climates — a lethal mix that makes fires harder to control.

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Wildfires that have killed 20 people in southern Chile and wiped out entire towns raged for a third day on Monday (Jan 20), fanned by warm temperatures and strong winds at the height of the southern hemisphere summer, reported AFP.

The blazes started Saturday in the Nuble and Biobio regions – about 500km south of the capital Santiago – and have since ripped through an area the size of the US city of Detroit.

Around 1,000 homes have been destroyed or damaged, officials said.

President Gabriel Boric said Monday that firefighters had managed to contain some of the blazes but that others remained “very active” and that new fires had broken out in the Araucania region bordering Biobio.

Both Nuble and Biobio were declared disaster areas, allowing for the deployment of soldiers who patrolled a desolate landscape of melted cars, twisted metal and houses reduced to rubble.

Yagora Vasquez, a resident of the small port town of Lirquen, which was particularly hard hit, told AFP, she had chosen to live in Lirquen – on a hill far from the sea – after seeing the devastation wrought by the tsunami of 2010 that killed more than 500 people in the same region of Chile.

This time, the threat came from the forest.

Read further here.

 

 

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