Times Colonist

Quebec north shore city declares state of emergency as forest fires multiply

- SIDHARTHA BANERJEE

MONTREAL —A city on Quebec’s north shore declared a state of emergency on Friday as forest fires raged in different parts of the province, forcing thousands from their homes.

Sept-Îles Mayor Steeve Beaupré said certain sectors of his city about 890 kilometres northeast of Montreal were ordered to evacuate by 4 p.m. Friday as a preventive measure, with an emergency shelter set up in nearby Port-Cartier.

The Uashat Mak Mani-utenam First Nation said the roughly 1,500 residents of the Innu community of Mani-Utenam outside Sept-Îles, have also been told to leave their homes. They will be taken to Pessamit, an Innu community southwest of BaieComeau.

Two fires are burning near Sept-Îles, which has a population of just over 25,000. One of those fires progressed quickly overnight, said Isabelle Gariepy, a spokeswoma­n for Quebec’s forest fire prevention organizati­on, known as SOPFEU.

Beaupré said the fire’s rapid growth wasn’t anticipate­d. “Last night, according to the latest informatio­n, it was not going in that direction, but the fire has progressed a lot,” Beaupré said in justifying the evacuation order. “There could be a junction between the two fires that are currently active.”

On Wednesday, another outof-control forest fire in northern Quebec forced the evacuation of about 500 homes in Chapais, east of Chibougama­u.

Chapais Mayor Isabelle Lessard said Friday would be decisive in determinin­g whether residents could return home, and she warned that even without visible signs of fire, there can still be danger.

“It remains an invisible enemy,” Lessard told a briefing on Friday. “We don’t currently see the fire from the city, we don’t see any smoke either, but … it’s still there, it’s still big, it’s still out of control.”

Late Friday, Public Security Minister François Bonnardel confirmed on Twitter that he has asked Ottawa for Canadian Armed Forces assistance to deal with the forest fires in Quebec.

Federal Public Safety Minister Bill Blair acknowledg­ed the request and said Ottawa was working to identify the “appropriat­e federal resources.”

Quebec has also sought firefighti­ng help from other countries, notably the United States, Portugal and Mexico, said Natural Resources and Forestry Minister Maïté Blanchette Vézina.

About 400 firefighte­rs with the province’s forest fire prevention organizati­on are deployed, and the province’s civil security department is fully mobilized.

According to SOPFEU, there were 119 active fires in the province as of Friday afternoon.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada