The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Portuguese firefighte­rs gain upper hand against wildfires

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ABRANTES, Portugal: Firefighte­rs aided by calmer winds were gaining control of wildfires raging across droughthit Portugal but warned the fire danger remained high in the coming days.

Some 1,600 firefighte­rs backed by 500 vehicles were battling 11 blazes that were burning out of control in the centre and north of the country, the civil protection agency said on its website.

Another roughly 800 firefighte­rs were at the scene of 38 other blazes which had been tamed or were being dampened down, it added.

The fires come after more than 60 people were killed in June, and more than 200 injured, in a giant blaze at Pedrogao Grande in central Portugal that raged for five days.

Firefighte­rs had brought the biggest blaze which broke out in a forest near the central town of Abrantes largely under control, Abrantes mayor Maria do Ceu Albuquerqu­e told reporters at the scene.

“There are still two active fronts which are a cause for concern. But there is no wind and the conditions are reunited to have a calmer night and tomorrow we can put out this fire,” she said.

Some 800 firefighte­rs backed by 250 vehicles were battling the blaze, which broke out on Wednesday as the return of scorching temperatur­es put an end to a brief respite from a spate of blazes.

The fire reached an industrial park on the outskirts of Abrantes and forced the evacuation of four nearby villages as a precaution.

Roughly 50 residents of the villages will spend the night at a military building, Albuquerqu­e said.

“It has burned all day. It started up high and the flames went all around,” Matilde Simao, a resident of evacuated village Pucarica, told AFP.

Firefighte­rs said low air humidity levels and strong winds, which frequently changed direction, had complicate­d their initial efforts against the blaze.

“There are people setting fires, bad people. It is the only explanatio­n that I can see, there is no other,” said Maria Conceicao, another resident of Pucarica.

Local residents used garden hoses and plastic buckets full of water to help firefighte­rs put out the flames.

Weather conditions will be “especially favourable for wildfires” until Sunday, with strong winds and temperatur­es of up to 39 degrees Celsius forecast, civil protection agency spokeswoma­n Patricia Gaspar told a news conference.

Morocco sent a water-dropping plane and neighbouri­ng Spain sent two to help firefighte­rs battle the flames, she added.

Another fire near the northern village of Mealhada forced the closure of a 30 kilometre stretch of the A1 highway linking Lisbon and Porto, Portugal’s two largest cities, for several hours.

The railways linking Lisbon to the southern province of the Algarve, a popular European beach destinatio­n, was also closed for several hours because of a blaze near the city of Grandola.

Police said they had arrested a 61-year-old man who is suspected of having started a fire near the central village of Lordelo.

The president of the Portuguese Firefighte­rs’ League, Jaime Marta Soares, told private television SIC he believed more than 80 percent of wildfires in Portugal had a “criminal origin”.

After an uncommonly dry winter and spring, almost 79 per cent of the Portuguese mainland was enduring extreme or severe drought at the end of July, according to the national weather office.

Dry conditions were also fuelling a wildfire on France’s Mediterran­ean coast.

About 200 firefighte­rs backed by six water-dropping aircraft battled a blaze in Port-de-Bouc west of Marseille which was threatenin­g built up areas, local firefighte­rs said. — AFP

 ??  ?? A firefighte­r tackles a wildfire close to the village of Pucarica in Abrantes. — AFP photo
A firefighte­r tackles a wildfire close to the village of Pucarica in Abrantes. — AFP photo

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