1,300 firefighters battle Portugal wildfires

LISBON, July 22 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Planes and helicopters joined
more than a thousand firefighters in central Portugal Sunday to battle huge
wildfires in a mountainous region where over 100 people died in huge blazes in 2017.

By 12:30 pm, one of the biggest mobilisations ever seen in the
area — including 1,300 firefighters and 400 vehicles — had been deployed to fight the blazes in the heavily forested Castelo Branco region, 200
kilometres north of Lisbon, the rescue services said.

Around 20 people were injured in the blaze, including eight firefighters
and 12 civilians, according to interior ministry figures.

One badly burned civilian was evacuated by helicopter to Lisbon.

The biggest effort — 800 firefighters, 245 vehicles and 13 planes and
helicopters — battled to douse flames in the municipality of Vila de Rei,
which had spread nearly 25 kilometres.

“Only the fire at Vila de Rei remains active,” Interior Minister Eduardo
Cabrita told a news conference.

Authorities were looking into whether the fires may have been started
deliberately, Cabrita said.

“The cause of the fires is being investigated… there’s something strange.
How is it that five such large fires broke out in areas that are so close to
each other?” he asked.

The commander of the Civil Protection for the region, Luis Belo Costa, said
that “given the difficult terrain, we have not succeeded in getting the fire
in Vila de Rei under control, but have only contained about 60 percent of it,
despite a lull in the wind.”

The army said it was dispatching 20 soldiers and machinery to open routes
“to facilitate access” for the firefighters.

In a message, President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa expressed his “solidarity
with the hundreds fighting the scourge of the fires”.

Two other forest fires reported on Saturday have since been brought under
control.

While a number of small villages were evacuated as a precaution overnight,
no additional measures were planned on Sunday.

But that could change “if the situation deteriorates,” Belo Costa said.

Five regions of central and southern Portugal were on maximum fire alert
Sunday because of the dry weather and winds.

– Inaccessible terrain –

However, temperatures are currently below the threshold of 41 degrees
Celsius (105 Fahrenheit) at which a red alert is triggered.

The fires, fanned by strong winds, had broken out on Saturday afternoon in
the more inaccessible areas in the Castelo Branco region.

The centre of Portugal is hilly and covered in dense forest and is
regularly ravaged by fires, including the deadliest in the country’s history
where 114 people died in two separate blazes in June and October 2017.

Portugal is still traumatised by those deaths, with authorities taking
extra precautions.

Much of the population in the area is elderly, as young people move to the
cities.

The forests are largely eucalyptus, a highly flammable wood used in the
paper industry.

Despite the combustion risks, the trees are planted because they are fast-
growing and represent an important source of income for locals.

According to the EU’s European Forest Fire Information System, more than
250,000 hectares of land were destroyed by fire across Europe between January and April this year, more than the 181,000 hectares recorded for the entire fire season in 2018. — NNN-AGENCIES

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