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Thousands of people have had to flee their homes in Tenerife as firefighters and the army struggle to contain an “out of control” wildfire.

Nearly 4,500 people were ordered to leave villages and campsites after the fire started on Wednesday, with thousands more told to stay inside.

The blaze has already burned at least 6,425 acres.

“This is probably the most complicated blaze we have had on the Canary Islands, if not ever, in at least the last 40 years,” said regional leader Fernando Clavijo.

He said the fire was currently “out of control” and that it was a race against time before temperatures increase again at the weekend.

Santa Cruz, the island’s capital, is 12 miles (20km) from the flames.

Tenerife‘s tourism office said the fire was not near any of the main holiday areas and cities, which are said to be operating normally.

More on Tenerife

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What is the Fire Weather Index and how does it work?

Waterbombing planes have managed to stabilise the fire south of Mount Teide, Spain’s highest peak, but it remained out of control on the northern flank.

“When you go outside you start suffocating. It’s as if you have something stuck in your throat,” said Alba Gil, 37, who lives in the village of La Esperanza.

Firefighters worked overnight on flames near Arafo on Tenerife
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Firefighters worked overnight on flames near Arafo on Tenerife

Elianna Diaz with her daughter and their horse in El Rosario, Tenerife
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Elianna Diaz with her daughter and their horse in El Rosario

More than 3,800 people have been told to stay at home due to poor air quality, said civil protection chief Montse Roman, and more evacuations could follow.

Access to the mountains has been shut off, but the island’s two airports were said to be operating normally.

Seventeen aircraft and about 350 firefighters and military personnel are involved in the firefighting effort so far.

Seventeen planes are working on the fire, say authorities. Pic: AP
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Seventeen planes are working on the fire, say authorities. Pic: AP

The flames advance through the forest near the town of El Rosario, as wildfire continues to burn on Tenerife, Canary Islands, Wednesday, Aug. 16, 2023. An out-of-control wildfire on the Spanish Canary island of Tenerife has burned some 2,600 hectares (6,400 acres) of land and forced the evacuation of some 300 people from several small towns, Canary Islands regional president Fernando Clavijo said Thursday. (Europa Press via AP)
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Smoke near a forest at El Rosario

Mr Clavijo said the fire’s perimeter was nearly 19 miles (30km) long.

“We are watching the big mountain and the blaze, we saw this firewall and we’ll see if they can control it, the situation seems pretty bad,” said local resident Celestino Suarez, 53.

A heatwave of more than 40C (104F) on the island last week left much of the ground bone dry.

Combination of satellite images shows the island of Tenerife before and during the wildfire, Spain August 13, 2023 (left) and August 16, 2023
Pic:Planet Labs PB
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Satellite images of Tenerife from 13 and 16 August

Tenerife is the latest place to experience an unusually serious wildfire this summer.

A blaze on nearby La Palma last month affected about 11,000 acres and led to more than 2,000 people being led to safety.

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The most devastating wildfire of recent months has been in Hawaii where at least 106 people died when flames ripped through a popular town on Maui.

Scientists say climate change is helping make extreme weather events more frequent.

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Israel strikes Beirut for first time since ceasefire deal agreed with Hezbollah

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Israel strikes Beirut for first time since ceasefire deal agreed with Hezbollah

Israel has carried out a strike on Beirut for the first time since it agreed a ceasefire deal with Hezbollah in November.

The Israeli military says the strike targeted a Hezbollah drone storage facility in Dahiyeh, in the city’s southern suburbs, which it called a key Hezbollah stronghold and where support for the militant group is strong.

Israel’s army used a post on X in Arabic to urgently warn people to evacuate parts of a Beirut suburb on Friday as it vowed to retaliate against strikes that it said were launched from Lebanon into northern Israel.

28 March 2025, Lebanon, Khiam: Heavy smoke billows from areas that were bombed by Israeli Forces in the southern Lebanese border town of Khiam. Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz threatened the Lebanese capital Beirut after rockets were launched from Lebanon towards Israel, jeopardizing the ongoing truce between the two countries since last November. Photo by: STR/picture-alliance/dpa/AP Images
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Smoke in areas bombed by Israeli forces in the south Lebanon town of Khiam. Pic: AP

Residents stand in the street for safety after an Israeli army airstrike hit the nearby neighbourhood of Hadath, in Beirut, Friday March 28, 2025.(AP Photo/Hussein Malla)
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People try to find safety after an Israeli airstrike in Hadath, in Beirut Pic: AP

Hezbollah denied firing the rockets at northern Israel, and accused Israel of seeking a pretext to continue attacking Lebanon.

Lebanon’s government ordered all schools and universities in Beirut’s southern suburb of Hadath to close for the day.

Shooting could be heard in some parts of the southern suburbs, warning people to leave their homes, and many residents were seen fleeing the area in cars and on foot.

Associated Press reporters in Beirut said they heard a large boom and saw smoke rising from where Israel’s military had said it would strike, a residential and commercial area containing at least two schools.

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Though it’s the first Israeli strike on Beirut since November’s ceasefire with the Hezbollah militant group, Israel has struck targets in southern Lebanon almost daily since then.

Israel’s defence minister, Israel Katz, said on Friday that if there was no peace in Israel’s northern communities, there would be no peace in Beirut either.

Hezbollah began launching rockets, drones, and missiles into Israel the day after Hamas’s 7 October 2023 attack on southern Israel.

In September, Israel carried out waves of airstrikes and killed most of Hezbollah’s senior leaders as the bubbling conflict became an all-out war.

An Israeli drone flies over Dahiyeh, in the southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, Friday, March 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)
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An Israeli drone flies over southern Beirut suburb of Dahiyeh. Pic: AP

More than 4,000 people in Lebanon died, while around 60,000 Israelis were displaced.

Under the ceasefire that halted the fighting, Israeli forces were supposed to withdraw from all Lebanese territory by late January.

The deadline was extended to 18 February, but Israeli troops have remained in five locations in Lebanon across from communities in northern Israel.

Meanwhile, Israel has carried out dozens of airstrikes on southern and eastern Lebanon, saying it attacked Hezbollah, while continuing drone attacks that have killed several members of the militant group.

Israeli strikes in the southern Lebanese village of Kfar Tibnit on Friday killed three people and injured 18, including children and women, Lebanon’s health ministry said.

Limited strikes to send a message without ending ceasefire

It’s unclear who fired two missiles at northern Israel earlier – Hezbollah insists it wasn’t them, and the IDF hasn’t directly blamed the group. That suggests it could be someone else, perhaps factions of Hamas – but Israel is holding Hezbollah accountable for any actions along the border.

Both Israel and Lebanon blame the other for violating the ceasefire, and Lebanon’s president has called on the US and France to intervene, as both are sponsors of the deal, which was agreed in November.

Israel is right to call the firing of missiles across the border a breach, but despite the truce, it has been hitting targets in Lebanon regularly, and that could also be deemed a violation.

Friday’s bombing of Beirut was limited and targeted, and a warning was sent beforehand for civilians to evacuate the area.

That suggests Israel is trying to escalate the message it sends but, at the same time, avoiding actions that might result in the ceasefire collapsing.

The new government in Lebanon and the armed forces are still struggling to get overall security control of southern Lebanon, but it is in Israel’s interests to give them a chance to do so.

Hezbollah has been severely weakened militarily by Israel’s invasion last year, but only the Lebanese government can reduce their political influence within the country.

With the fighting resumed in Gaza and almost daily Houthi missile attacks on Israel now, Washington is unlikely to encourage a return to conflict in Lebanon too.

Six people died in Israeli airstrikes on several locations in Lebanon last week.

The UN special co-ordinator for Lebanon, Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert, said the escalation was deeply concerning, calling it a “critical period for Lebanon and the wider region”.

According to an Israeli official who was not authorised to speak to the media, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was meeting top security officials to discuss an impending strike on the capital.

The escalation came as Israel ended its ceasefire with Hamas by launching a surprise wave of strikes that killed hundreds of people in Gaza.

Read more:
Oscar winner ‘detained and beaten up’
What happened to Israel-Hamas ceasefire?

Earlier this month, Israel halted deliveries of food, fuel, medicine, and humanitarian aid to Gaza’s roughly two million Palestinians.

Israel has vowed to escalate the war until Hamas returns 59 hostages it still holds – 24 of them believed to be alive. Israel is demanding that the group give up power, disarm, and send its leaders into exile.

Hamas has said it will release the remaining captives only in exchange for Palestinian prisoners, a lasting ceasefire, and an Israeli withdrawal from Gaza.

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Gaza’s orphans have lost everything – even the dream of growing up

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Gaza's orphans have lost everything - even the dream of growing up

The number of children killed in Gaza, according to the local health ministry, recently rose above 15,000.

Fatality figures in Gaza are disputed by Israel, but even allowing for miscalculation or exaggeration, it is a staggering loss of life.

Many children have been orphaned, losing not just both parents but also siblings, grandparents and other close relatives too.

Against this tragedy, the children of Gaza can’t dream of growing up.

War has robbed them of that.

‘I just want to forget’

The children of Gaza have spent a year and a half under Israeli bombardment.
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The children of Gaza have spent a year and a half under Israeli bombardment

“I’m here hanging out with my friends because I just want to forget the war,” Osama says, surrounded by other young boys, probably no older than 10.

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“I look at my destroyed home there and think about the memories I had there with my mum and dad, in their room. And now it’s gone.

“We used to have fun every day, sit in the kitchen, play together at home, and now it’s all gone.

“I want to forget everything. I want to have fun.”

Israel continues to bombard Gaza

On Thursday, Egypt sent a delegation to Qatar in an attempt to push for a renewed ceasefire.

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with senior security officials on Thursday night to discuss developments.

For now, Israel is continuing to attack Gaza daily and is refusing to lift a blockade on aid entering the Strip.

The United Nations has reported that cases of malnutrition among children in northern Gaza have almost doubled as a result.

Hundreds of children have also been killed since the resumption of attacks almost two weeks ago.

She danced until the war came home

Five-year-old Jenin liked to dance, like so many five-year-old girls around the world liked to dance.

She danced in the tent where her family was sheltering from the war nearby and she danced until the day that the war came home.

Five-year-old Jenin liked to dance.
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Five-year-old Jenin liked to dance

It was early in the morning when the missile struck – the family was getting ready for Suhoor, the Ramadan breakfast.

Twenty-five of Jenin’s relatives were killed, including her father and all of her brothers and sisters.

Her mother was already dead, killed in a previous strike.

Jenin now lies in a hospital bed, still unaware she has lost her family.

Twenty-five of Jenin's relatives were killed, including her father and all of her brothers and sisters, in an Israeli strike that left her badly hospitalised.
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Jenin is now mostly unconscious and in desperate need of surgery she cannot get in Gaza

She is mostly unconscious – her skull fractured, she has bleeding on her brain and is in desperate need of surgery she cannot get in Gaza.

“She’s truly lost all sense of safety. She’s terrified by anyone who comes near her,” Jenin’s aunt told Sky News.

“Jenin has lost the ability to speak. The shock was so severe that she can no longer communicate verbally.”

She went on: “Instead, she points and gestures, but words elude her. Most of the time, she is angry and throws things around; her emotional state is drained.

“Sometimes she responds, but other times she doesn’t. When she looks at us, there’s a visible frustration in her eyes -frustration from not being able to see her mum.”

The aftermath of the strike that killed Jenin's family.
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The aftermath of the strike that killed 25 members of Jenin’s family

Another family that didn’t survive the night

In Gaza City, our team filmed another family that didn’t survive the night.

Rescuers searched for survivors but pulled out the bodies of four people.

Twelve-year-old Sameer was the only one to escape the strike. He sobbed in silent prayer next to the wrapped corpses of his parents and siblings. Another orphan in Gaza.

Sameer was the only one to escape the strike that killed his entire family.
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Sameer was the only one to escape the strike that killed his entire family

Sameer at his family's funeral.
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Sameer at his family’s funeral

“One of my favourite memories with my family was a day at the beach,” he told us.

“We swam and played and had such a good time. I remember my brother walking back and spilling juice on himself. We laughed and told him off!”

Read more:
What happened to Israel-Hamas ceasefire?
Anti-Hamas chants heard at rare protest in Gaza

His family was buried together, side-by-side in a shallow grave. Sameer, the one who lived, watched on, silent and lost.

“I wasn’t scared before, because I had my family around me. Right now, I am scared to lose more people. My mum and dad and everyone were martyred. I’m worried about losing more people. So now whenever I hear the planes above, I think they’re going to bomb me in my home.”

Sameer returned to the ruins of his home and found his tattered school books.
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Sameer returned to the ruins of his home and found his school books

There is no word for someone who has lost so much.

But in Gaza, there are so many children who have lost everything.

Their childhood, their families, their future.

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‘If VW disappears, people won’t stay in the town anymore’ – fears over Trump’s car tariffs

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'If VW disappears, people won't stay in the town anymore' - fears over Trump's car tariffs

At one factory in East Germany, they’re pumping out a car part every second, cutting and pressing millions of pieces destined for the country’s mega motor industry.

The HENNgineered plant sits on the edge of Zwickau, a city where the car is king. And when it comes to vehicles, America is Germany’s most important trading partner.

In 2024, automotive exports to the US reached a total value of €36.8bn (£30.7bn), according to the German Automobile Association.

So, Donald Trump’s decision to introduce 25% tariffs on all passenger cars and light commercial vehicles imported into the US is a big problem for manufacturers and suppliers alike.

SN screengrab from Robbins VT about Trump tariffs. GVs from german car parts manufacturer HENNgineered in Zwickau, and the August Horst Car Museum. FTV PKG GERMAN AUTO TARIFFS ROBBINS ZWICKAU 27032025
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Trump’s tariffs could prove a big problem for car manufacturers and suppliers like HENNgineered in Zwickau

SN screengrab from Robbins VT about Trump tariffs. GVs from german car parts manufacturer HENNgineered in Zwickau, and the August Horst Car Museum. FTV PKG GERMAN AUTO TARIFFS ROBBINS ZWICKAU 27032025
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This factory makes a car part every second, cutting and pressing millions of pieces

SN screengrab from Robbins VT with GVs from german car parts manufacturer HENNgineered in Zwickau, and the August Horst Car Museum. FTV PKG GERMAN AUTO TARIFFS ROBBINS ZWICKAU 27032025
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There are fears about future jobs after Donald Trump announced latest tariffs on car imports

“Such tariffs would be very hard. It could make companies decide to move to the US to produce there, which might also mean jobs are lost here in Germany,” explains site manager Matthias Wissel.

Volkswagen is now the main local employer, providing around 10,000 jobs.

Read more: Trump’s car tariffs condemned

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But car building is in people’s blood, with the first vehicle made here around 120 years ago.

The city museum proudly displays cars through the ages.

One room hosts shiny silver racing cars, another brightly coloured Trabants.

SN screengrab from Robbins VT about Trump tariffs. GVs from german car parts manufacturer HENNgineered in Zwickau, and the August Horch Car Museum. FTV PKG GERMAN AUTO TARIFFS ROBBINS ZWICKAU 27032025
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The August Horch Museum in Zwickau showcases the city’s long history of car making

SN screengrab from Robbins VT about Trump tariffs. GVs from german car parts manufacturer HENNgineered in Zwickau, and the August Horch Museum. FTV PKG GERMAN AUTO TARIFFS ROBBINS ZWICKAU 27032025
SN screengrab from Robbins VT about Trump tariffs. GVs from german car parts manufacturer HENNgineered in Zwickau, and the August Horch Museum. FTV PKG GERMAN AUTO TARIFFS ROBBINS ZWICKAU 27032025

The city developed cars from the German empire right through to the current modern republic, explains Thomas Stebich, head of August Horch Museum.

While the immaculate car displays celebrate the city’s pioneering past, tariffs are making many feel uncertain about the future.

“If nobody in the US buys a German car or less people buy German cars, it will have an impact, of course, because we need to build high numbers of cars here [for jobs],” Stebich says.

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If you want to understand how key the auto industry is to German identity, think mining to the UK in its heyday.

Around 700,000 people are employed in the industry, which generates more than 540 billion euros in sales a year.

But tariffs are not the first storm German car manufacturers have had to weather.

High energy and labour costs, competition from China and weaker domestic demand due to the ailing economy mean the German car industry has been cutting jobs.

Audi recently announced it will cut 7,500 administration jobs by 2029.

By 2030, VW will lose 35,000 roles.

Read more from Sky News:
UK firms plead for tariff deal with Trump
What will happen on ‘liberation day’?

They’re not the only ones, but Trump’s tariffs news comes as a fresh blow to workers.

A representative on the VW works council in Zwickau cancelled our interview due to crisis talks.

All the workers we met seemed pessimistic and deeply worried for the plant and the city’s future.

Their concern is shared by Aliriza Oernek, who owns four restaurants in Zwickau.

He says in recent years they’ve seen many of their young people leave the area to seek jobs elsewhere. He fears fresh pain from tariffs will hurt the whole community.

“Volkswagen is the biggest employer in Zwickau, the main source of money for people who live here. If they were to disappear, then people won’t stay in the town anymore,” he says.

Aliriza Oernek, who owns four restaurants in Zwickau.
SN screengrab from Robbins VT about Trump's tariffs in Germany. FTV PKG GERMAN AUTO TARIFFS ROBBINS ZWICKAU 27032025
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Aliriza Oernek, owns four restaurants in Zwickau, and worries that tariffs will hurt businesses like his

Like its counterparts, Volkswagen is closely watching developments around tariffs and assessing how they could impact the supply chain and production.

All eyes are currently on the European Union to see how it will retaliate.

In a statement, a spokesperson for VW Group said they “share the assessment of most experts that US tariffs and any counter-tariffs will have negative consequences for growth and prosperity in the US and other economic areas… and continue to advocate for constructive talks”.

So, while car makers brace for impact, Germany’s vowed it will “not take this lying down”, calling for a “firm response” from the EU as it tries to protect its automakers from this new American attack.

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