EU NEIGHBOURS, VOLUNTEERS HELP FIGHT FIRES
HELSINKI Sweden is fighting its most serious wildfires in decades — including blazes above the Arctic Circle — prompting the government to seek help from the military, hundreds of volunteers and other European nations.
As of Friday, over 50 blazes were torching forests, mostly in central and western Sweden but also in the north, above the Arctic Circle, and on the Baltic Sea island of Gotland.
No deaths or injuries have been reported so far but large evacuations have taken place and thousands of people have been warned to remain inside with the windows shut to avoid breathing the smoky air.
Finland and Norway have also reported wildfires in the past few days.
Some 500 voluntary soldiers from the Swedish military have been dispatched to help with Black Hawk helicopters in the central region of Alvdalen.
In some areas emergency rescue services have called for all ablebodied men to help out putting the wildfires that have raged this week.
The fires have come as Europe’s Nordic region has experienced an intense heat wave in the past week. Temperatures have reached over 32 degrees Celsius throughout Finland, Norway and Sweden. The weather also has been dry with no substantial rain for weeks — making the region’s brush and forests highly flammable.