Northern Japan wildfires prompt mass evacuations as flames spread

April 24, 2026 6:36 AM EDT

Smoke blankets mountainous areas of Otsuchi in Iwate Prefecture, Japan, on April 24, 2026, as wildfires continue, following their outbreak at two locations in northeastern Japan two days ago, in this photo taken by Kyodo. Mandatory credit Kyodo/via REUTER

TOKYO, April 24 (Reuters) - ‌Two forest ​fires ​continued to spread toward residential areas in a northern Japanese ‌town on Friday, prompting authorities to expand ⁠evacuation orders to more than 3,000 people, ‌with the blazes still ‌uncontained, media reports said.

The blaze broke out on Wednesday afternoon in a mountainous ​area in Iwate Prefecture, followed by another fire about two hours later ⁠roughly 10 km (6.2 miles) away near Otsuchi town.

• The Fire ​Department has been battling the flames from both the ground and the ​air, but the fire ‌remains uncontained, said public broadcaster NHK.

• The wildfires have scorched ⁠more than 1,176 hectares (2,905 acres) and forced evacuation orders covering 1,541 households and 3,233 ⁠people, according to NHK.

• It is the second-largest wildfire ​in Japan, behind a 2025 Ofunato fire that consumed about 3,370 hectares, said TBS News.

• Seven ‌buildings have burned, including one residence; no casualties reported, according ‌to NHK.

• One evacuation shelter was closed ⁠on Friday morning ‌as fire approached, ​NHK said.

(Reporting by Irene Wang and Mariko Katsumura; Editing by Sharon ‌Singleton)



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