


LATAKIA, Syria — Syrian firefighters are facing heavy winds, high temperatures and ordinance left behind from the 13-year civil war as they try to extinguish some of country’s worst wildfires in years, a government minister said Monday.
The fires, which started last week, have proven difficult to bring under control despite reinforcements from Jordan, Turkey and Lebanon that came to the war-torn country to help Syrian teams fight the blaze.
Syrian Minister of Emergency and Disaster Management Raed al-Saleh said their main challenges are two locations in the coastal province of Latakia that they have been trying to control for two days.
“We have controlled other locations,” al-Saleh told The Associated Press at the scene.
On the second day of the fire, firefighters managed to get 90% of the wildfires under control but explosions of leftover war ordnance and heavy winds helped spread the fires again, al-Saleh said. He added that 120 teams are fighting the blazes.
— The Associated Press