Fires kill at least 64 and cause widespread destruction in central Chile
Intense fires raging across densely populated areas of central Chile have now killed at least 64 people. They're already believed to be the country's deadliest forest fires on record and the president has warned the death toll could get much worse. At least 1,600 homes have been destroyed, and high temperatures and strong winds are making it harder to bring the fires under control.
Warning, there are some distressing images in this report.
Видео Fires kill at least 64 and cause widespread destruction in central Chile канала Channel 4 News
Warning, there are some distressing images in this report.
Видео Fires kill at least 64 and cause widespread destruction in central Chile канала Channel 4 News
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
Другие видео канала
Residents fight wildfire in Ecuador capitalLiam Dutton nails pronouncing LlanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogochKenya's push for carbon capture profit threatens indigenous forest peopleEnnio Morricone on Kubrick & The Good, The Bad and The Ugly | Channel 4 NewsHow a baby hare changed a political advisor’s lifeWWII enemies reunited in D-Day anniversaryThe Great Hack's David Carroll finally sees his Cambridge Analytica dataThe mega tunnels built to power Britain’s Green RevolutionFighting raging Amazon rainforest fires in BrazilSouth Africa gripped by kidnapping crisisAuthor Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie on love, race and hairDame Judi Dench: I'm a Quaker and a 'peacenik' - videoBack to school: What we can learn from Denmark’s coronavirus responseDavid Guetta interview (English): a victim of his own success?Boris Johnson: MPs vote on Partygate reportPeople forced to pull out own teeth as dentists go privateThe 'knife angel' removing weapons from British streetsInside a call centre on cost of living crisis frontlineYoung medics leaving Lebanon as country teeters on brink of collapseCost of living: Prices soaring at fastest rate for 30 yearsKincora 'VIP paedophile ring' victim Richard Kerr speaks out