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Northern Japan Wildfires Prompt Mass Evacuations as Flames Spread

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)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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