Irish Independent

‘Red alert’ in France as mercury hits record 45C

- Andy Gregory PARIS

A TEMPERATUR­E of 45C has been recorded in France, the hottest in the country’s history.

Measured in Carpentras, a town in the south-eastern region of Vaucluse, it came as the country declared a “red alert” weather warning for the first time ever amid a deadly heatwave sweeping Europe.

Elsewhere in the country volunteers scoured the streets of Paris, providing water to homeless people in a bid to avoid civilian deaths, old cars were banned from the roads in four major cities and some 4,000 schools were closed.

Teachers at the Victor Hugo Primary School in Colombes, near Paris, abandoned suffocatin­g classrooms and kept children outside all day, spraying them with water and organising quiet activities in the shade.

“I make them go in the playground with books, in the shade, they must stay seated,” said teacher Valerie Prevost.

“We tell them to dampen their caps, to drink regularly.”

Four people died in drowning accidents attributed to thermal shock, the French Ministry of Solidarity and Health said in a statement.

Some accused the government of going overboard in its reaction, but Prime Minister Edouard Philippe defended the efforts after 15,000 people died in a heatwave in 2003.

“This heatwave is exceptiona­l by its intensity and its earliness,” he said.

“Measures have been taken for the most vulnerable people. But given the intensity of the heatwave, it’s the entire population who must be careful today... both for oneself and for loved ones and neighbours.”

Until yesterday, the country’s hottest day on record had been August 12, 2003, when the mercury hit 44.1C during the notoriousl­y deadly heatwave.

Temperatur­e records for June were broken across central Europe, with meteorolog­ists blaming the continent’s extreme weather on a bubble of scorching Saharan air, high pressures across the continent and a storm stalling over the Atlantic.

In Spain, heatstroke reportedly claimed the life of a 17-year-old farm worker as he cooled off in a Córdoba swimming pool, and an 80-year-old man on a street in Valladolid.

Yesterday firefighte­rs were still struggling to contain wildfires that have devastated 10,000 hectares of Catalonia.

The Italian Ministry of Health also issued a red alert warning in more than a dozen cities after a homeless man died of suspected heatstroke in the streets of Milan and another in the Marche region, the ‘Il Globo’ newspaper reported.

In Germany, a man was cautioned after being caught driving a scooter naked, apparently to cool down.

And in Belgium, two English Bulldogs died after being left in a car in Mons, veterinari­an Pascal Lafosse told local media.

“We have known that heatwaves are getting worse due to climate change for a number of decades now,” atmospheri­c science lecturer at the University of Bristol, Dann Mitchell said. (© Independen­t News Service)

 ?? PHOTO: ZAKARAIA ABDELFAFI ?? Cooling down: A boy jumps into the water of the Trocadero Fountain in Paris yesterday amid the heatwave.
PHOTO: ZAKARAIA ABDELFAFI Cooling down: A boy jumps into the water of the Trocadero Fountain in Paris yesterday amid the heatwave.
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