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Reading: Namibia’s Etosha National Park, home to critically endangered black rhino, engulfed in huge fire
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Today in Canada > Tech > Namibia’s Etosha National Park, home to critically endangered black rhino, engulfed in huge fire
Tech

Namibia’s Etosha National Park, home to critically endangered black rhino, engulfed in huge fire

Press Room
Last updated: 2025/09/29 at 8:05 AM
Press Room Published September 29, 2025
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Namibia has sent more than 500 soldiers to help battle a huge wildfire that has burned across 30 per cent of the country’s best-known national park.

The office of President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah said Sunday that an unknown number of wildlife have been killed in the fire, which started last Monday and has spread across the vast Etosha National Park in Namibia’s north.

An endangered black rhino grazes in Namibia’s Etosha National Park in this 2015 file photo. The park is currently engulfed in a huge wildfire. (Martin Bureau/AFP via Getty Images)

The park is home to hundreds of species of wildlife, including critically endangered black rhinos. The president’s office said the fire had also spread into villages on the outskirts of the park, but no human casualties have been reported.

It said the cause of the fire was not yet certain.

Video on national broadcaster NBC showed swathes of blackened trees and grass, and antelope escaping from the fire.

Authorities have sent helicopters and trucks with water tanks to fight the fires. They deployed 500 soldiers on Sunday to help with the operation and join a first contingent of 40 soldiers who had been sent to the park on Saturday, according to the president’s office.

The statement said approximately 30 per cent of the grazing grounds in the 22,200-square-kilometre park had been destroyed.

Elephants at waterhole
Elephants drink at a waterhole in Etosha National Park on Sept. 23, 2004. (Werner Pillich/The Associated Press)

The Etosha National Park is one of Africa’s largest and is renowned for its salt pan that turns into a lake during the rainy season and attracts wildlife.

Namibia’s Environment Ministry said in a separate statement that the ecological damage to the park was extensive and the fire had burned nearly 7,700 square kilometres of vegetation. The ministry said it suspected that the fire may have been started by a charcoal production business on a farm bordering the park.

Namibia is a hot, arid country in southern Africa and the fire came in the midst of the driest time of the year in Etosha.

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