Though widespread attention is just starting to build around the fires destroying the Amazon rainforest, one discovery is sparking conversation about another troubling environmental crisis in Central Africa.

According to MODIS satellite data, the number of Brazil’s Amazonian fires over the past 48 hours is less than the number of crop fires sweeping through Angola and the Democratic Republic of Congo. As of Sunday, Al Jazeera reports that Angola reported 6,902 fires, compared to 3,395 in the DRC and 2,127 in Brazil within a two-day period. 

The revelation shocked many on Twitter, who asserted that leaders are turning a blind eye to fires in Africa.

Information from NASA does not show if the fires in Angola or DRC are grassland or forest fires; nevertheless, some suggest that the whopping number of blazes in Central Africa is due to farmers' practice of crop fires to clear land for the next harvest season. The “slash and burn” method, which involves cutting and burning down vegetation to clear land for cultivation, is lamented by environmentalists who warn that it could offset deforestation, limited biodiversity and soil erosion.  

In June 2018, more than 67,000 fires were reported in Angola during a one-week period.