Buckingham Palace said she was expected to make a full and swift recovery
Five people died and dozens were hurt when a huge wildfire swept through several villages in mainly Kurdish southeastern Turkey overnight, the health minister said on Friday.
Hundreds of animals also perished in the blaze, local residents said. An AFP correspondent saw many of their bodies lying on the ground.
Dramatic overnight images on social media showed flames raging over a large area, lighting up the night sky.
Stay up to date with the latest news. Follow KT on WhatsApp Channels.
By the morning they had left huge areas of charred and blackened land in two areas of Diyarbakir and Mardin provinces.
"Five people died and 44 were injured, 10 seriously," Health Minister Fahrettin Koca wrote on X.
Seven emergency teams and 35 ambulances went to the scene, he said.
Turkey's pro-Kurdish DEM party gave a higher toll. It said on X there were "seven dead" and criticised the government's intervention as "late and insufficient".
During the night, DEM had urged the government to send water bombers, saying fighting the blaze from the ground was "not enough".
An AFP reporter in Koksalan village in Diyarbakir province saw around 100 animals lying dead on the ground.
Residents told AFP around half their flock of about 1,000 sheep and goats had perished in the blaze.
A local vet confirmed around half the flock had died, without giving a precise number, telling AFP many others were being treated for burns.
Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya blamed the fire on "a stubble burn" which started late on Thursday and spread quickly due to strong winds, affecting five villages.
Justice Minister Yilmaz Tunc said on X the public prosecutor's office had opened a probe into the cause of the fire.
Turkey has experienced 74 wildfires so far this year, which have ravaged 12,910 hectares of land, according to the European Forest Fire Information System (EFFIS).
In the summer of 2021, Turkey suffered its worst-ever wildfires. They claimed nine lives and destroyed huge swathes of forested land across its Mediterranean and Aegean coasts.
The disaster prompted a political crisis after it emerged that Turkey had no functioning firefighting planes.
It heaped pressure on President Recep Tayyip Erdogan who was forced to accept international help.
It also prompted Ankara to push through Turkey's delayed ratification of the Paris Climate Accord, becoming the last of the Group of 20 major economies to do so.
Experts say climate change will cause more frequent and more intense wildfires and other natural disasters in Turkey unless measures are taken to tackle the problem.
ALSO READ:
Buckingham Palace said she was expected to make a full and swift recovery
The airport said on social media platform X passengers due to fly from Terminal 3 should come to the airport as normal unless advised otherwise
The re-conduct of the exam was announced following allegations of irregularities in NEET-UG, including paper leaks
The quake was at a depth of 93 km (57.79 miles)
The cases stem from the family's practice of bringing servants from their native India and included accusations of confiscating their passports
The wreck and its artefacts were discovered more than a mile deep on the bed of the Mediterranean Sea
Fatalities have also been confirmed by Indonesia, Iran, Senegal, Tunisia and Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan region
Conservatives on track to be left with just 53 seats in 650-member House of Commons, with the opposition Labour Party forecast to win 516