The Hamilton Spectator

Portugal tries to contain deadly fires

- BARRY HATTON

Emergency services in Portugal said Tuesday they were making good progress in controllin­g a major wildfire that killed 64 people in the central area of the country, while officials said reports that a water-dropping plane had crashed in the area of the blaze turned out to be false.

Maria Jose Andre of Portugal’s Air Accident Office said her department was told by the Civil Protection Agency that a Canadair water-dropping plane had crashed on Tuesday while fighting the wildfire. Her office immediatel­y sent a crash investigat­ion team to the area.

But in a bizarre sequence of events, officials with the Portuguese government and the Civil Protection Agency said they could not confirm a crash had taken place. They said airborne search-and-rescue teams dispatched to look for wreckage didn’t find anything and that no firefighti­ng planes were missing.

Civil Protection Agency spokespers­on Fausto Coutinho suggested that word of a plane crash was based on misleading informatio­n relayed from the fire area. He could not explain why Portugal’s Air Accident Office said it received a call from the agency notifying it of a plane crash, but said the confusing situation on the ground could have misled people.

“It could have been a strange coincidenc­e, with a plane passing over and an explosion occurring on the ground at the same time,” Coutinho told the AP.

Vitor Vaz Pinto, another Civil Protection Agency spokespers­on, said an abandoned caravan containing gas bottles had exploded in the same area and sent up a fireball, suggesting that may have led people to think there was a crash.

The Civil Protection Agency said about 2,400 firefighte­rs and 24 water-dropping aircraft were fighting the deadly wildfire around the area of Pedrogao Grande, which was raging for a third consecutiv­e day about 150 kilometres north of Lisbon.

Secretary of State for the Interior Jorge Gomes said the wildfires were gradually ebbing and being contained.

“There are already some areas where the fires are contained and being extinguish­ed,” he told reporters.

Some firefighti­ng resources were being diverted to Gois, about 20 kilometres from Pedrogao Grande, where almost 800 firefighte­rs and four planes were battling flames. Vaz Pinto told reporters the Gois wildfire was “very fast and very explosive” and had forced the evacuation of 11 hill villages.

Temperatur­es forecast to reach 43 C, gusting winds and bone-dry woodland were fuelling the blazes, Vaz Pinto said.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Antonio Costa ordered an investigat­ion into what happened on Saturday night when the deaths occurred, 47 of them on a road as people fled the flames.

Costa’s order asked three questions: whether extreme weather could explain the scale of the disaster, why emergency services communicat­ions at times didn’t work, and why the road where the deaths occurred was not closed.

 ?? PABLO BLAZQUEZ DOMINGUEZ, GETTY IMAGES ?? Firefighte­rs try to extinguish a fire in a forest near Pedrogao Grande, in Leiria district, Portugal. Fires there have claimed 64 lives.
PABLO BLAZQUEZ DOMINGUEZ, GETTY IMAGES Firefighte­rs try to extinguish a fire in a forest near Pedrogao Grande, in Leiria district, Portugal. Fires there have claimed 64 lives.

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