• A resident looks at a gutted house after a massive fire engulfed the area in Sokcho, South Korea. EPA
    A resident looks at a gutted house after a massive fire engulfed the area in Sokcho, South Korea. EPA
  • Burnt vehicles filling a junkyard after being hit by a massive forest fire are seen from above. Yonhap via AP
    Burnt vehicles filling a junkyard after being hit by a massive forest fire are seen from above. Yonhap via AP
  • Burnt vehicles fill a junkyard after being hit by a massive forest fire that started the previous day. Yonhap / EPA
    Burnt vehicles fill a junkyard after being hit by a massive forest fire that started the previous day. Yonhap / EPA
  • A burnt vehicle sits after being hit by a massive forest fire. Yonhap / AP
    A burnt vehicle sits after being hit by a massive forest fire. Yonhap / AP
  • A firefighting helicopter helps to put out a forest fire. Yonhap / AFP
    A firefighting helicopter helps to put out a forest fire. Yonhap / AFP
  • Soldiers try to put out embers from a fire on a mountain. Yonhap / EPA
    Soldiers try to put out embers from a fire on a mountain. Yonhap / EPA
  • Soldiers try to put out a fire still in smouldering debris after the area was hit by a forest fire in Goseong. Yonhap / AFP
    Soldiers try to put out a fire still in smouldering debris after the area was hit by a forest fire in Goseong. Yonhap / AFP
  • Firefighters put out a fire after a village was swept by the wildfire in Gangneung. Yonhap / Reuters
    Firefighters put out a fire after a village was swept by the wildfire in Gangneung. Yonhap / Reuters
  • Firefighters try to put out a fire after houses were destroyed by a forest fire in Donghae. Yonhap / AFP
    Firefighters try to put out a fire after houses were destroyed by a forest fire in Donghae. Yonhap / AFP
  • A firefighter tries to put out a fire of houses destroyed by a forest fire in Sokcho. Yonhap / AFP
    A firefighter tries to put out a fire of houses destroyed by a forest fire in Sokcho. Yonhap / AFP
  • Residents rest at a gymnasium as they take shelter from a forest fire in Goseong. Yonhap / AFP
    Residents rest at a gymnasium as they take shelter from a forest fire in Goseong. Yonhap / AFP
  • Residents rest at a shelter during a wildfire in Sokcho. Yonhap / AP
    Residents rest at a shelter during a wildfire in Sokcho. Yonhap / AP
  • Firefighters struggle to extinguish fire in Sokcho. Yonhap / EPA
    Firefighters struggle to extinguish fire in Sokcho. Yonhap / EPA
  • A view of fire which broke out a day earlier strikes mountains of Gangneung. Yonhap / EPA
    A view of fire which broke out a day earlier strikes mountains of Gangneung. Yonhap / EPA

South Korea declares national disaster over raging forest fire


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A giant forest fire swept across swathes of South Korea Friday, as authorities declared a rare national disaster, deploying 900 fire engines and tens of thousands of personnel to bring it under control.

Apocalyptic images on television and social media showed walls of flame lighting up the night, buildings engulfed in flames, and clouds of smoke billowing across hillsides during the day.

The blaze broke out late on Thursday alongside a road in the town of Goseong, in the far north-east of the country and only about 45 kilometres from the border with North Korea.

Fanned by strong winds it quickly spread through the mountainous area, incinerating 400 homes and 500 hectares of land, the government said.

Nearly 4,000 people were evacuated and one person died, authorities said, while 11 were injured.

More than 870 fire engines and about 10,000 emergency personnel were dispatched to fight the blaze, the National Fire Agency said.

The military sent 32 helicopters, along with fire engines of its own and 16,500 soldiers, to help.

"Fortunately, the main fire has been brought under control," provincial governor Choi Moon-soon said in a radio interview with YTN, but others were still burning.

The central government declared a state of national disaster, entitling affected areas to special assistance including goods and equipment, and banning entry to dangerous zones.

The last time Seoul made such a declaration was in 2007, when a crude oil carrier leaked thousands of tonnes of oil into the sea off the west coast.

President Moon Jae-in told officials to take all measures necessary to battle the inferno, and to liaise with North Korean authorities if the fire approached the border, the presidential office said.