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Wildfires kill at least three and displace thousands across southern Europe

Derek Gatopoulos and Llazar Semini

Athens, Greece: Wildfires have intensified across southern Europe, with a round-the-clock battle to protect the perimeter of Greece’s third-largest city and at least three deaths reported in Spain, Turkey and Albania.

Outside the Greek port city of Patras, firefighters struggled to protect homes and agricultural facilities as flames tore through pine forests and olive groves. Tall columns of flames rose behind apartment blocks on the outskirts of the city, while dozens of vehicles were torched as flames swept through a nearby impound lot.

A firefighter and men try to control the fire approaching a house during a wildfire in Patras city, western Greece.AP
A man protects his face from the smoke as he walks by the fire approaching houses during a wildfire in Patras.AP

“Today is another very difficult day with the level of fire risk remaining very high across many parts of the country,” Fire Service spokesman Vassilis Vathrakoyiannis said on Wednesday, Athens time. At least 15 firefighters were hospitalised or received medical attention for burns, smoke inhalation or exhaustion, he added.

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As water-dropping planes and helicopters swooped overhead, residents joined the effort, beating back flames with cut branches or dousing them with buckets of water.

Firefighting resources were stretched thin in many affected countries as they battled multiple outbreaks following weeks of heatwaves and temperature spikes across the Mediterranean. On the Greek island of Chios, exhausted firefighters slept on the roadside following a night-long shift.

Aircraft rotated between blazes on the western Greek mainland, the Patras area and the island of Zakynthos. Athens also sent assistance to neighbouring Albania, joining an international effort to combat dozens of wildfires. An 80-year-old man died in one blaze south of the capital, Tirana, officials said on Wednesday.

Residents of four villages were evacuated in central Albania near a former army ammunition depot. In the southern Korca district, near the Greek border, explosions were reported from buried World War II-era artillery shells. Authorities said dozens of homes were gutted in a central region of the country.

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Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez expressed condolences after the death of a firefighting volunteer in the hard-hit Castile and Leon region north of the capital, Madrid, where thousands have been displaced by evacuations.

A volunteer reacts in front of a wildfire in Larouco, north-western Spain.AP
Local residents and volunteers work together to put out an encroaching wildfire in Larouco, north-western Spain.AP

“The wildfire situation remains serious, and taking extra precautions is essential,” Sanchez wrote in an online post. “Thank you, once again, to all those working tirelessly to fight the flames.”

Evacuation centres were filled to capacity in parts of central Spain, with some spending the night outdoors on folding beds. The most severe fires pushed northward into more rural areas, where some residents hosed the walls of their homes to try and protect them from fire.

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Services along a high-speed rail link between Madrid and the north-western Galicia region were suspended after fires got close to some sections of the tracks, state rail company Renfe said.

In Turkey, a forestry worker was killed on Wednesday while responding to a wildfire in a southern region, officials said. The Forestry Ministry said the worker died in an accident involving a fire truck that left four others injured.

A water-bombing plane spreads water to extinguish a fire in a forested area in Guzelyeli, on the outskirts of Canakkale, north-west Turkey.AP
A man carries a sheep on the motorcycle during a wildfire in Patras city, western Greece.AP

Turkey has been battling severe wildfires since late June. A total of 18 people have been killed, including 10 rescue volunteers and forestry workers who died in July.

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In France, which is recovering from massive recent fires in the southern regions, temperatures of up to 42 degrees were expected for the third consecutive day. Officials issued weather alerts giving local authorities discretion to cancel public events and cordon off areas with high fire risks.

Authorities across European countries have cited numerous causes for the massive fires, including careless farming practices, improperly maintained power cables and summer lightning storms.

Local residents and volunteers try to put out a wildfire in Larouco, north-western Spain.AP

Law enforcement officials in North Macedonia also cited indications of arson, motivated by rogue developers. Firefighters struggled to contain a blaze at a nature reserve outside the capital, Skopje, on Wednesday.

The European Union has rushed aid to fire-hit countries, including non-member states, with ground crews and water-dropping aircraft. Much of the recent effort was concentrated on Montenegro, where major wildfires continued to burn in rugged areas near the capital, Podgorica.

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“Natural disasters know no borders,” said Ljuban Tmusic, head of Montenegro’s civil protection agency. “In Montenegro, the resources we have ... are clearly not enough.”

AP

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