Bolivia declares national emergency due to forest fires
LA PAZ (Reuters) -Bolivia declared a national emergency due to raging forest fires the country's defense ministry announced on Saturday.
In a press conference, defense minister Edmundo Novillo said the national emergency would allow the country to quickly coordinate international support.
"This will allow us to have more agile and effective support from friendly countries and from international cooperation," Novillo said.
Bolivia has seen the largest number of wildfires since 2010 with at least 3 million hectares (7.5 million acres) burned this year according to Inpe, Brazil's space research agency that monitors fires.
South America is in the throes of its peak fire season, that spans August and September, after an unusually early fire season started devastating the country in July following a drought.
Bolivia's firefighting forces are stretched thin and the government has called for international aid. Indigenous volunteers tried to protect land they use to grow crops and feed livestock near the Chiquitano forest north of Concepcion that extends towards Brazil and Paraguay, but some were forced to evacuate.
Brazil has also seen major blazes in cities and the Amazon rainforest is off to the worst start in two decades after a record drought.
(Reporting by Daniel Ramos; Writing by Alexander Villegas, Editing by Franklin Paul)