Sat, Apr 19, 2008 - Page 7 News List

Smoky haze envelops Buenos Aires

THE GUARDIAN , BUENOS AIRES

A woman walks a dog in the Palermo district in Buenos Aires on Thursday. The Argentine capital has been enveloped by smoke caused by the burning of pastures outside the city.

PHOTO: EPA

Argentina’s capital disappeared under a thick acrid cloud yesterday on Thursday as increasingly dense smoke from grass fires raging 30 minutes north of the city started causing breathing difficulties and eye irritation among its residents.

The government blamed farmers for the smoky haze, which is expect to envelop Buenos Aires for the rest of the week.

“This is the largest fire of this kind we’ve ever seen,” said the interior minister, Florencio Randazzo. “It was started by farmers clearing land for cattle grazing driven by greed for profit and with total disregard for human life.”

Special phone numbers had been provided for the public to report those who started fires, he said.

The government is at loggerheads with the country’s agricultural industry after a three-week strike by farmers over taxation ended earlier this month.

The poor visibility caused by the dense smoke has forced the closure of the main roads in and out of Buenos Aires, after a rise in the number of deaths on the smoke-choked routes. The authorities have also had to close the city’s ports and airports.

In neighboring provinces, such as Santa Fe and Entre Rios, visibility is down to zero, as black clouds from some 300 simultaneous fires on islands in the Parana river delta covered farmlands, population centers and the national routes connecting Argentina with Paraguay and Brazil..

“Covering highways with smoke just to clear a field of weeds is unforgivable,’’ Alberto Fernandez, the chief of the Argentine Cabinet, said in a radio interview.

His colleagues Randazzo and the environment minister, Romina Picolotti, met provincial governors to discuss what further measures should be taken.

The fires have been caused by indiscriminate burning by farmers clearing land for cattle grazing.

On April 3 farming groups suspended a nationwide strike after 21 days. The strike, over the rises in export tax on soyabeans and sunflower seeds, led to food shortages, provoking street demonstrations.

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