The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Survivors escape deadly fires by leaping into water tanks

Authoritie­s face mounting criticism after forest wildfires kill 64 people

- Barry haTTon

Survivors have emerged with stories of leaping into water tanks and other dramatic escapes from the deadly forest fires scorching central Portugal.

Authoritie­s have come under mounting criticism for not doing more to prevent the country’s deadliest natural disaster in decades.

More than 2,100 firefighte­rs are still battling to contain several major wildfires in the area north-east of Lisbon, that began on Saturday and which have killed 64 people, including a firefighte­r, and injured 135.

Water-dropping planes from Spain, France and Italy arrived as part of a European Union cooperatio­n programme but they were grounded in some places because thick smoke limited visibility, officials said.

That left firefighte­rs – backed by fire engines and bulldozers – to do the heavy work on the ground in temperatur­es that approached 40C (104F).

Firefighte­rs brought some of the blazes under control, but other wildfires still raced through inaccessib­le parts of the area’s steep hills, the Civil Protection Agency said.

Portugal is observing three days of national mourning after the deaths on Saturday around the town of Pedrógão Grande, 90 miles north of Lisbon.

Scorching weather, as well as strong winds and woods that are bone dry after weeks with little rain, fuelled the blazes.

 ?? Pictures: Getty Images. ?? A burned car on the side of the road near Castanheir­a de Pêra, in the Leiria district, and a house destroyed by the fires near Pampilhosa da Serra, in the Coimbra district.
Pictures: Getty Images. A burned car on the side of the road near Castanheir­a de Pêra, in the Leiria district, and a house destroyed by the fires near Pampilhosa da Serra, in the Coimbra district.
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