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VP orders tougher measures for forest fire prevention
BEIJING—Chinese Vice Premier
Hui Liangyu has ordered to step up efforts to prevent forest fires.
Speaking in Beijing on Thursday, he said the risk of fire had increased
as the lasting drought and high temperatures had left large amounts of
flammable debris in affected forest areas. The northeastern part of the
Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region and the southwestern regions faced
increasing risk of forest fires due to the warming weather, Hui said.
The national forest fire prevention headquarters and similar agencies
should improve their emergency plans, enhance leadership and strengthen
coordination to ensure the safety of people and forests. Authorities
should step up monitoring systems and enforce every single measure to
prevent forest fires. Relevant departments should report severe forest
fires immediately, he added.
The State Headquarters for Forest Fire Control issued an urgentcircular
on Wednesday, requiring all-level forest fire control departments to
tighten control over fire use in forests and keep a close look over
children and mentally-retarded people who are likely to cause fires. It
added people found responsible for forest fires would be punished
severely.
The fires that had been raging in China’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous
Region for nearly five days were extinguished on Wednesday with the help
of 3,900 firefighters and cloud-seeding efforts, the local
meteorological authority said. Meteorological staff had shot 42 cannons
in 20 operations since Tuesday morning to induce heavy snowfall with
precipitation of up to 9 millimeters on the burning woods in the Greater
Higgnan Mountains in the country’s northeast.
The fires, which engulfed an area of about 23.8 square kilometers, were
reported after 130 firefighters had extinguished another blaze in the
same area on Friday. That fire was started by villagers burning grassy
areas to open up new fields. A forest fire in Shangri-la, a
Tibetan-inhabited prefecture in Yunnan Province in the country’s
southwest, had been brought under control since it erupted late on
Sunday.
The fire’s movement was stopped about 10 kilometers away beforeit
reached Potatso Park, the country’s first national park that boasts
diverse scenery, including crystal-clear lakes, mountains and streams.
However, 187 hectares of forested land were hit by the blaze, which was
caused by improper use of fire by villagers in the wild, according to a
police investigation
.—Xinhua |