The Citizen (KZN)

Portugal in mourning

1 000 FIREFIGHTE­RS BATTLE DEADLY FLAMES

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More than 1 000 firefighte­rs are battling to get control of a massive forest fire that swept through central Portugal at the weekend, as the nation mourned the 64 killed in the flames.

Many victims were burnt as they were trapped in their cars around the epicentre of the blaze in Pedrogao Grande, in what is the deadliest such disaster in Portugal’s recent history.

“Portugal weeps for Pedrogao Grande,” said the I newspaper, while mainstream Publico’s headline simply read “Why?” “The fire has reached a level of human tragedy that we have never seen before,” said a visibly moved Prime Minister Antonio Costa, who announced three days of mourning from Sunday.

By Monday evening, the death toll had hit 64, officials said. The total number of injured in the region of the fire – which authoritie­s said was 70% under control – stood at 135 since Saturday.

Portugal’s national Route 236 was transforme­d into “a road of hell” where 47 of the fatalities occurred as the ferocious blaze ripped through the wooded countrysid­e.

Most of them were families who had spent the afternoon at a beach on a nearby river, local authoritie­s said.

Although the searing temperatur­es had dropped slightly on Monday, the fire was still raging, spreading to neighbouri­ng regions of Castelo Branco and Coimbra, as firefighte­rs continued their grim search for bodies.

Local residents, too, have stepped in to try to stop the blaze. In the small village of Atalaia Fundeira, a big cloud of smoke billowed from a scrub of land as villagers, including 76-year-old Palmira Coelho, rushed out with buckets of water and a tractor arrived with a tank of water and hose.

After 10 minutes of frantic activity, the fire was largely extinguish­ed, leaving charred ground in its wake.

“I have witnessed a lot of fires, but never like this, it’s never happened here – the way it spread, the speed,” said Betty Jesus, a 50-year-old Venezuelan who has lived in the area for decades.

In the village of Figueiro, people are still traumatise­d by the swift moving blaze.

“The fire didn’t spread by the ground ... it spread through the air at the height of the trees ... in five minutes all were on fire in an area of around 10 kilometres,” said Virgilio Godinho.

“Our pain is immense,” said Portuguese President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa. “We feel a sense of injustice because the tragedy has hit those Portuguese of whom one speaks little – those living in an isolated rural zone.”

Police chief Almeida Rodrigues blamed dry thundersto­rms for the blaze which broke out on Saturday in Pedrogao Grande, ruling out arson. “We found the tree hit by the lightning,” he said.

“Everything burnt very quickly given the strong winds. The flames passed within two or three kilometres of my house,” said local resident Isabel Ferreira, 62.

“It was really hell. I thought the end of the world had come,” said Maria de Fatima Nunes, another survivor.

The wooded hills in the area north of Lisbon, which 24 hours before had glowed bright green with eucalyptus and pine trees, were gutted by the flames.

Along the IC-8 highway cutting through the fire zone, smoke was still rising from the ground and small pockets of fire burned among the charred, black tree stumps.

One road running through Pedrogao Grande was littered with burnt-out cars. At one spot, a police officer watched over the covered body of a victim of the fire.

Other bodies were found in houses in isolated areas. At least three villages near Pedrogao Grande were evacuated.

At a retirement home in Pedrogao Grande on Monday, about 150 people who had been evacuated or fled were waiting to learn when they could go home.

Boxes of donated food and drinks were outside the makeshift refuge, the air still reeking of smoke.

“We have people here who are waiting for news of their loved ones, who want to know and are really anxious,” said Soledade Lourenco, 51, a nurse volunteeri­ng at the centre.

Over the weekend, Portugal sweltered under temperatur­es topping 40 degrees Celsius.

About 35 forest fires continued to burn across the country on Monday, with more than 2 000 firefighte­rs and 700 vehicles mobilised.

Spain, France and Italy have sent water-bombing planes and Greece has offered firefighte­rs. The European Union has also offered to help.

Portugal was hit by a series of fires last year which devastated more than 1 000 square kilometres of the mainland.

Fires on the tourist island of Madeira in August killed three people, while across 2016 around 40 homes were destroyed. – AFP

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