Wed. Mar 26th, 2025
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South Korea’s forest service said thousands of fighters are tackling at least five active wildfires across the country.

At least 18 people have been killed and almost 20 injured as wildfires rage in multiple areas across South Korea’s southeastern region where thousands of firefighters and soldiers are struggling to control rapidly expanding blazes, officials said.

South Korea’s official Yonhap news agency said the death toll had reached 18 on Wednesday, the sixth day of the fires, which are being fuelled by strong and dry winds.

According to Yonhap, four victims burned to death after they tried to escape the fires but their car overturned. They were found dead on a road late on Tuesday night.

The Korea Forest Service said firefighters are fighting at least five active wildfires nationwide as of Wednesday morning.

Smoke rises from a wildfire that devastates the area, in Andong, South Korea, March 25, 2025. Yonhap via REUTERS THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY. NO RESALES. NO ARCHIVES. SOUTH KOREA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN SOUTH KOREA.
Smoke rises from a wildfire that has devastated areas in Andong county, South Korea, on March 25, 2025 [Yonhap via Reuters]

The wildfires began late on Friday in Sancheong county in Northern Gyeongsang province before spreading to neighbouring Uiseong county – located about 180km (111 miles) southeast of the capital Seoul – and have advanced into Andong, Cheongsong, Yeongyang, and Yeongdeok counties.

Officials in Andong and other southeastern cities and towns have ordered residents to evacuate as firefighters struggle to contain the fires, which have burned more than 17,000 hectares (42,000 acres) of forest and destroyed hundreds of structures, including the more than 1,000-year-old Gounsa temple in Uiseong.

National treasures stored at the Buddhist temple, which was built in 681, were moved to safety in other areas of the country, Yonhap said.

Authorities also issued an emergency alert for Hahoe Folk Village – a UNESCO-listed World Heritage Site popular with tourists in Andong county – as the blaze drew closer.

“The wildfire is currently about 8km (4.9 miles) from Hahoe Village,” an official at the Korea Heritage Service said, adding that fire trucks and dozens of firefighters are on standby and spraying water around the premise to prevent the fire from spreading.

A man sprays water onto a thatched roof for the approaching wildfire in Andong Hahoe Folk Village, in Andong, South Korea, on March 25, 2025. Inhabitants of a UNESCO-listed village were ordered to evacuate while a historic Buddhist temple was burned to the ground as South Korea scrambled to contain worsening wildfires, which are tearing across the country's southeast. (Photo by Yasuyoshi CHIBA / AFP)
A man sprays water on a thatched roof amid the approaching wildfire in Andong’s Hahoe Folk Village, South Korea, on Tuesday [Yasuyoshi Chiba/AFP]

Lee Byung-doo, a forest disaster expert at the country’s National Institute of Forest Science, said the fire in Uiseong exhibited “unimaginable” scale and speed.

South Korea’s acting President Han Duck-soo said the raging fires had exceeded all prediction models for such a disaster.

“Wildfires burning for a fifth consecutive day in Ulsan and the Gyeongsang region are causing unprecedented damage,” Han said. The fires are “developing in a way that is exceeding both existing prediction models and earlier expectations”, he said.

According to Yonhap, the South Korean military has deployed an estimated 5,000 service members and sent 146 helicopters to help fight the fires alongside thousands of firefighters.

Approximately 500 inmates at a prison have also been transferred to other facilities outside the fire danger zone.

epa11987094 Helicopters extinguish wildfires by dropping water to a mountain in Ulsan, 305 kilometers southeast of Seoul, South Korea, 25 March 2025. EPA-EFE/YONHAP SOUTH KOREA OUT
Helicopters extinguish wildfires by dropping water on a mountain in Ulsan, southeast of Seoul, South Korea on Tuesday [Yonhap/EPA]

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