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US: New Mexico wildfire kills 2

April 15, 2022

An elderly couple has been killed by a wildfire in a town in the southwestern US state of New Mexico, where fast-moving blazes have destroyed dozens of homes.

https://p.dw.com/p/49yc1
Fire burns along a hillside in Ruidoso, New Mexico
Like much of the American West, New Mexico is in the grip of a years-long drought that makes it vulnerable to wildfiresImage: Alexander Meditz/AP/picture alliance

A wildfire in the southwestern US state of New Mexico has killed an elderly couple, state police said on Thursday.

The New Mexico State Police said in a statement that the couple attempted to evacuate but were unaccounted for.

They died in their burned home in the town of Ruidoso, which is on the eastern foothills of the Sierra Blanca mountain range, and is among several towns badly affected by wildfires raging through the state.

Climate migrants within the US

A spokeswoman for the Lincoln National Forest, which is centered around the town of Ruidoso, said firefighters have been able to control the so-called McBride Fire from spreading further into the town as of Thursday. 

Around 5000 residents have fled Ruidoso since the fire started on Tuesday, according to local officials.

The blaze is one of half a dozen wildfires raging in the state.

The remains of a home left after a wildfire spread through the village of Ruidoso, New Mexico, on Wednesday, April 13, 2022.
Officials say a wildfire has burned around 150 structures, including homes, in the New Mexico town of RuidosoImage: Alexander Meditz/AP/picture alliance

Hundreds of homes burned by McBride Fire

The McBride Fire has destroyed more than 200 homes in the area and burned around 5,736 acres (2,321 hectares) since it started on Tuesday, according to local officials.

Electricity supplies to homes have also been disrupted. 

The pace of the spread of the fire was accelerated by wind gusts of up to 90 miles per hour (144 kilometers per hour).

As of Thursday, the blaze has moved to the northeast of the state to largely unpopulated mountains and canyons.

Although New Mexico is no stranger to wildfires given severe droughts and high winds, climate researchers have warned that the intensity of the wildfires is linked to the effects of climate change caused by human activity and is only going to go up.

rm/jsi (Reuters, AP, AFP)