More than 210 forest fires in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa have damaged 14,430 acres, and 55 fires were started by locals themselves, the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Forest Department has reported.
The locals set fire to the forests, as it was rumoured that the government would pay Rs100,000 as a reward to each person who participates in torching forests, said a spokesperson of the forest department, Latif-ur-Rehman.
Rehman said that the department lodged FIRs and at least 21 people have been arrested.
The environment department was unable to find the underlying cause of 143 fires but it said that 22 of them were because of dry and hot weather.
National rainfall for the month of March 2022 was 62% below normal and ranked the 9th driest month since 1961, contributing to harsh environmental conditions, according to Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) statistics.
“Natural causes include climate change, lightning, temperature transmission through rocks, drought and heat continue with rising greenhouse gas emissions, we expect more wildfires in years ahead, especially with the fire seasons getting longer,” warned the report.
Wildfires that broke out between May 10 to date:
Date | Area affected |
---|---|
May 10 | Chilghoza forest, Neelan Bhoto, Hally, Barkot and Muslim Abad village |
May 17 | Chinari Area, the Margalla Hills |
May 20 | Musakhail, Sherani districts, Koh-e-Sulaimani |
May 23 | Tirah Valley |
May 29 | Batarasi Forest, Mansehra |
June 4 | Anlok Dara Barikot, Charbagh Kot, Kabal Segram and Chaksair, Titwalan, Chakesar, Shang |
June 5 | Kotla Village, Whispering Pines Resort, Makhniyal, Neelan Bhoto and Khariyan |
June 6 | Alpuri |
June 7 | Ghani Chathra mountain, Swabi |
June 9 | Bisham Tehsil, Piyaz area and Tarkanu Banda of Puran Tehsil |
June 10 | Lelai Dandai, Sangota and Amluk Dara |