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    Canada heatwave: Military on standby as lightning triggers more wildfires

    The Canadian military is on standby to help evacuate residents in British Columbia where wildfires linked to a record-breaking heatwave threaten to engulf communities.

    Emergency services say they are now trying to control more than 170 fires, many triggered by lightning strikes.

    Many western areas are tinder-dry followed the unprecedented hot weather.

    Meanwhile, at least two people are reported to have died in the village of Lytton that was destroyed by fire.

    Lytton recorded Canada’s highest-ever temperature of 49.6C (121.3F) on Tuesday.

    About 350 military personnel as well as aircraft are being readied to help threatened communities, Canadian defence Minister Harjit Sajjan told reporters.

    The announcement came after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau held emergency talks with ministers as well as provincial and indigenous leaders from affected areas.

    “We will be there to help,” he said.

    Map
    A police blockade outside Lytton, where a wildfire raged through and forced residents to evacuate, July 1, 2021
    image captionPolice roadblocks are in place around the village of Lytton
    Martha Van Dyke of Lytton sits in her car with her cats, Tigger and Kona after a wildfire that raged through her town forced residents to evacuate, outside of Lytton, British Columbia, Canada July 1, 2021
    image captionLytton resident Martha Van Dyke grabbed her cats and fled her home as the fire swept in

    Large swathes of North America have seen a high-pressure “heat dome” in recent days, causing abnormally high temperatures. The heatwave has also affected Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, the Northwest Territories and northern Ontario.

    Although linking any single event to global warming is complicated, experts say climate change is expected to increase the frequency of extreme weather events, such as heatwaves. 

    In British Columbia, evacuation orders and alerts are in place for several areas north of the city of Kamloops, 350km (220 miles) north-east of Vancouver where the worst fires are raging.

    “We saw 12,000 lightning strikes, roughly, yesterday [Friday],” said Cliff Chapman, director of provincial operations for British Columbia Wildfire Service.

    “Many of those lightning strikes were hitting near communities… in the Kamloops area,” he said, according to broadcaster CBC.

    On Saturday, the British Columbia Coroners Service confirmed that at least two people had died in Lytton where a wildfire on Wednesday evening forced many of its 250 residents to flee without their belongings.

    Earlier, resident Jeff Chapman told CBC he had seen his parents killed by the fire as they sought refuge in a trench near their home.

    Lytton Mayor Jan Polderman told the BBC: “Within about 15 minutes the whole town was engulfed in flames.”

    British Columbia Chief Coroner Lisa Lapointe said extreme heat was probably “a significant contributing factor” to a recent spike in deaths. The figure of 719 deaths was three times the average number.

    “Many of the deaths experienced over the past week were among older individuals living alone in private residences with minimal ventilation,” she said on Saturday.

    Temperatures have eased in coastal areas but there is not much respite for inland regions. The British Columbia Wildfire Service said it was braced for more wildfires.

    BBC.com

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