Some schools in Meulaboh city suspended classes on July 26 after fires destroyed 70 hectares of forests in the province last week, reported from Jakarta by Vietnamnews.
The country’s national disaster agency recommended people monitor their cultivation land and not reclaim and burn forests. It also warned of an escalating risk of forest fires as the dry season is expected to continue for several months.
There are about 180 forest fire hotspots in six Indonesian provinces, significantly lower than in 2015.
Last year, studies by the US’s Harvard and Columbia Universities estimated that the 2015 smog outbreak may have caused more than 100,000 premature deaths.
Forest fires occur mainly on Indonesia’s Sumatra and Borneo islands with the haze blanketing many parts of the country, affecting public health and triggering crisis with neighbouring countries like Singapore and Malaysia.