Out-of-control wildfires in Canada force all 20,000 residents of Yellowknife to flee

By Dustin Jones

Residents flee Yellowknife, Canada, on Highway 3 after being ordered to evacuate on Wednesday due to a wildfire heading closer to the city. Pat Kane/Reuters hide caption

toggle caption Pat Kane/Reuters

Residents flee Yellowknife, Canada, on Highway 3 after being ordered to evacuate on Wednesday due to a wildfire heading closer to the city.

Pat Kane/Reuters

Some 20,000 people have been ordered to evacuate their homes in Yellowknife, the capital of Canada's Northwest Territories, and the surrounding areas as the Behchoko/Yellowknife wildfire burns out of control less than 10 miles outside the city. More than 230 active fires are threatening other cities and towns in the region.

The order to evacuate was issued by the minister of municipal and community affairs on Wednesday, forcing Yellowknife and Ingraham Trail residents to flee their homes and businesses by car and plane. Residents of the First Nations communities of N'Dilo and Dettah were also ordered to evacuate. Authorities told residents they have until noon on Friday to evacuate, and that without rain, the inferno could reach the area by the weekend.

Wildfires outside of Yellowknife, the capital of Canada's Northwest Territories, as seen from space on Tuesday. As of Thursday the fires are less than 10 miles outside of the city. NASA/Michala Garrison hide caption

toggle caption NASA/Michala Garrison

Wildfires outside of Yellowknife, the capital of Canada's Northwest Territories, as seen from space on Tuesday. As of Thursday the fires are less than 10 miles outside of the city.

NASA/Michala Garrison

The reads, "These fires remain out-of-control," and as of Tuesday, the fires around Yellowknife could be .

Airtankers flew missions throughout Wednesday night to combat the blaze, according to the government's department of environment and climate change. Firefighting crews have been doing their best to put out hot spots, while others tried to protect cabins and other structures around Highway 3, the main road west out of Yellowknife. In the city itself, officials are taking protective measures including turning on sprinklers and creating fuel breaks.

Images of the blaze are heartbreaking. Photos and videos appearing across social media platforms show bumper-to-bumper traffic as residents try to flee the area. Others show vehicles traveling along the highway engulfed in smoke, with smoldering trees lining the roads as they drive toward safety.

A screenshot of the fires from Instagram user Kimberly Benito shows evacuees traveling by car through highways engulfed in smoke. @kimmbenito/Screenshot by NPR hide caption

toggle caption @kimmbenito/Screenshot by NPR

A screenshot of the fires from Instagram user Kimberly Benito shows evacuees traveling by car through highways engulfed in smoke.

@kimmbenito/Screenshot by NPR

'Hoping for the best but prepared for the worst'

Kimberly Benito is an international student from the Philippines studying online at the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology while living in Yellowknife for a year. She said it was her first time seeing a wildfire in person.

"For the past week, I would look out the window and see how orange/smoky the skies are and that's really scary," Benito told NPR.

"Hoping for the best but prepared for the worst," Benito posted to her story Wednesday while packing a box of her belongings.

Tuesday to allow the territory to acquire and deploy desperately needed resources to fight the fires.

"We find ourselves in a crisis situation and our government is using every tool available to assist," Thompson said in a press release Tuesday.

Yellowknife is the traditional land of the Yellowknives Dene First Nation, but was founded as a gold mining town in 1934, according to the . It became the capital of the Northwestern Territories in 1967, and now is known as a cultural, economic and government services hub for the Northwestern Territories. It's also a great place to see the Northern Lights.

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