RIO DE JANEIRO — Firefighters on Monday battled flames spreading through a national park in Brazil that is enveloping Brasilia in smoke. It's the latest wildfire in the country, which is experiencing an historic drought.
More than 490 firefighters were trying to extinguish blazes that have already burned through 2,000 hectares (4,942 acres) of the conservation area of Brasilia National Park. There are four main fire fronts, all concentrated in the eastern region of the park, according to a statement from ICMBio, the government agency that manages the park.
The fire ''spread very quickly because of wind speed, low humidity, and it is very hot,'' João Paulo Morita, an ICMBio fire management coordinator, said in a video distributed by the agency.
The situation improved towards the end of the day, Morita said, adding that there were still fires in the woods near the streams. ''The job tonight will be to fight these fires that are inside these forests,'' he added.
Three aircraft are using water to tackle the flames, and a helicopter is helping to monitor the burned areas, the ICMBio statement said.
Federal Police are investigating the case, as the fire was started by human activity, the statement said, adding that so far there have no reports of injured or rescued animals.
The head of the agency, Mauro Pires, told newspaper Folha de S.Paulo that the fire appears to have started near the edge of the presidency's countryside residence.
Smoke from the fire smothered the capital, Brasilia, on Monday, and columns of black smoke were visible from several points in the city.