Hundreds
of firefighters from across the EU have been rushed to France to help battle wildfires in an unprecedented show
of international solidarity.
Most are stationed along a 26 mile (40km) active fire-front in the
south-west, where a blaze described as “monstrous” continued to devastate pine
forests.
Romanian
firefighters and teams from Poland, Austria, Greece and Italy were also
deployed to help more than 1,100 French firefighters try to contain the blaze.
President Emmanuel Macron tweeted of the more than 360 firefighters arriving
with vehicles and planes: “Our partners are coming to France’s aid against the
fires. Thank you to them. European solidarity is at work!”
In a
summer of extreme heat and drought, France has faced its most serious forest fires in years. One local firefighter
described the Landiras blaze in south-west France as “a sleeping monster which
can wake at any gust of wind”.
The French state broadcaster reported that since the start of the year,
56,000 hectares of forest had burned in France – three times the annual average
this decade. There have also been forest fires in northern regions not usually
hit by summer blazes, including in Brittany, where firefighting planes arrived
from Sweden to help.
Authorities
in the Gironde said in a statement that more than 7,400 hectares of forest had
burned in the Landiras fire, France’s biggest blaze. They said that although
the fire had not developed further overnight, high temperatures and dry
conditions expected on Friday meant there was a “severe risk” of the fire
spreading, and it would be a “complicated” day for fire teams.
The fire had already destroyed 14,000
hectares in July – the driest month in France since 1961 – before being
contained, but it had never been fully extinguished and had continued to
smoulder in the region’s peat-rich soil before erupting again this week in the
tinder-dry pine forests.
Since flaring up again on Tuesday, the fire,
which officials suspect may have been caused by arson, has burned through 7,400
hectares, destroyed or damaged 17 homes, and forced 10,000 people to flee,
Lieut-Col Arnaud Mendousse of the Gironde fire and rescue service told AFP.
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