Dozens dead and injured in South Korean bushfires that also destroyed 1300-year-old temple

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Seoul: At least 16 people have died and another 19 have been injured as bushfires ravage South Korea’s southern regions amid dry weather and strong winds, government officials said on Wednesday.

Officials in Andong city and other south-eastern cities and towns ordered residents to evacuate on Tuesday as firefighters struggled to contain multiple blazes fuelled by dry winds, which burnt more than 17,000 hectares of land and destroyed hundreds of structures, including a 1300-year-old Buddhist temple.

Firefighters extinguish a fire at a factory building that has been engulfed in a wildfire in Uiseong, South Korea on Saturday.Credit: AP

More than 5500 people were forced to evacuate from their homes in Andong, the neighbouring counties of Uiseong and Sancheong, and the city of Ulsan, where the fires were the largest, according to South Korea’s Ministry of the Interior and Safety.

South Korean officials had said that firefighters had extinguished most of the flames from the largest fires in those areas, but the ongoing dry and windy weather caused setbacks and allowed the blazes to spread again.

Nearly 9000 firefighters, along with more than 130 helicopters and hundreds of vehicles, were deployed to battle the fires, but efforts were partially suspended overnight as the winds strengthened.

Officials in Andong and Uiseong county ordered residents in several villages and those near Andong University to evacuate to safe locations or temporary shelters – including schools and indoor gyms – as a fire that started in Uiseong continued to spread due to strong winds.

A Korea Forest Service helicopter dumps fire retardant on a wildfire in Sancheong, South Korea, on Tuesday.

A Korea Forest Service helicopter dumps fire retardant on a wildfire in Sancheong, South Korea, on Tuesday.Credit: AP

The blaze in Uiseong destroyed Gounsa, a Buddhist temple built in the 7th century, according to officials from the Korea Heritage Service. There were no immediate reports of injuries, and some of the temple’s national treasures, including a stone Buddha statue, were evacuated before the fire reached the wooden buildings.

The fire also spread to the nearby coastal town of Yeongdeok, where officials shut down roads and ordered residents of at least four villages to evacuate. The Justice Ministry did not immediately confirm local reports that it had begun relocating some 2600 inmates from a prison in Cheongsong county, also near Uiseong.

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