Malaysia

Sarawak wildfires spread as temperatures rise

Authorities says Kuching, Miri, Sibu recorded most cases.

Updated 1 year ago · Published on 28 Jul 2024 2:37PM

Sarawak wildfires spread as temperatures rise
The Sarawak Fire and Rescue Department says there has been an up to 80% increase in wildfire cases over the past few days. – The Vibes pic, July 28, 2024.

by Stephen Then

WILDFIRES are being reported across Sarawak due to extreme heat and deliberate open burning as temperatures rise during the current heatwave sweeping the state.

The Sarawak Fire and Rescue Department announced today that there has been an up to 80% increase in wildfire cases over the past few days. The major districts of Kuching, Miri, and Sibu recorded the most cases, according to the department's latest updates.

Yesterday (27 July), there were 21 cases of wildfires caused by intense heat, dryness, and deliberate open burning activities. Firefighters battled fires across approximately 60 hectares (roughly the size of 150 football fields) in various districts, according to statistics from different fire stations.

The department stated its firefighters are on high alert to respond to wildfires.

The heatwave is spreading across Sarawak, with extreme dry and hot weather reported in Sri Aman Division in southern Sarawak and Bintulu Division in northern Sarawak. This prompted the Malaysian Meteorological Department to issue a Level 1 (red alert) warning for these two areas starting yesterday morning.

The department reported that Sri Aman and Bintulu have recorded temperatures between 35 and 37 degrees Celsius continuously for the past three days. "Due to this, a Level 1 heatwave warning has been issued to the public in Sri Aman and Bintulu to take all precautions," the department said.

State health authorities have warned people to avoid outdoor activities and to stay hydrated.

In other divisions in Sarawak, such as Miri and Sibu, temperatures of around 34 degrees Celsius are being recorded.

Only last month, floods affected various places in Sarawak's interior districts following heavy rain. The current heatwave has also been reported in numerous places in Peninsular Malaysia. – July 28, 2024.

Spotlight

Malaysia

World Cup betting crackdown nets three women in Kuching

Malaysia

Schoolboy suspended after allegedly choking classmate in canteen seat dispute

Malaysia

Grandfather sentenced to 33 years jail, 14 strokes for sexual assault against granddaughters

Malaysia

Court slams 'fishing expedition' subpoena, frees Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim from testifying

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

PKR mulls legal action over Rafizi and Nik Nazmi exit to Bersama

Malaysia

44-year-old woman charged with murder of Indonesian

Malaysia

Muhyiddin calls for Perikatan Nasional meeting at Bersatu headquarters today

Malaysia

Removable sunshades allowed as long as visibility unaffected – minister clarifies

You may be interested

Malaysia

Removable sunshades allowed as long as visibility unaffected – minister clarifies

Malaysia

44-year-old woman charged with murder of Indonesian

Malaysia

NHMS: At least one in four Malaysian teens depressed, suicidal tendencies rise

Malaysia

Azmin Ali, Radzi Jidin dropped in PN leadership reshuffle

Malaysia

Court slams 'fishing expedition' subpoena, frees Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim from testifying

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

Bersatu 'on the brink of collapse' as Muhyiddin’s leadership comes under fresh fire

Malaysia

AI-powered probe uncovers SOCSO fraud syndicate exploiting disabled, identity thefts

Malaysia

China, Taiwan nationals fined over international love scam targeting victims across Asia