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Villagers, firefighters battle huge blazes in central Portugal

July 22, 2019
Villagers help to put out a forest fire at the small village of Colos, Portugal on Sunday. -Reuters photo
Villagers help to put out a forest fire at the small village of Colos, Portugal on Sunday. -Reuters photo



VILA DE REI, PORTUGAL - Blazes in central Portugal reached houses on Sunday, forcing locals to take matters into their own hands as they tried to protect their homes from huge wildfires with buckets of water and hosepipes as strong winds fanned the flames.

One of the three wildfires which broke out on Saturday in Castelo Branco, a district 225 kilometers northeast of Lisbon, is still burning. Having spread to the nearby Santarem district, they threatened several villages in the Vila de Rei and Macao municipalities.

Portugal's Civil Protection said some houses were destroyed by the flames but did not give a specific number.

Around 870 firefighters are on the ground according to the National Authority for Civil Protection. However, a Reuters photographer in Vila de Rei said few firefighters were visible.

The wildfire was easing as the wind loses strength and temperatures drop during the night, a Civil Protection official told reporters in the early hours of Monday.

Authorities have evacuated villages and fluvial beaches as a precaution and 30 people have been injured. One civilian is in serious condition and remains hospitalized with first and second-degree burns.

The fires stirred memories of a devastating wildfire in the central town of Pedrogao Grande in June 2017, the worst disaster in modern Portuguese history, which killed 64 people and injured more than 250.

"The fire is out of control, without resources on the ground, and the population at risk," Vasco Estrela, the mayor of Macao, told Portuguese radio station TSF on Sunday. "We never thought we would live through this again."

Images broadcast by Portuguese TV channel TVI showed villagers in Macao trying to protect their houses and animals as smoke filled the air, forcing many to wear masks.

Around 300 firefighting vehicles are still on the ground battling the blazes, along with 20 soldiers and four bulldozers, according to the agency.

"It's a calamity here," 75-year-old resident Maria Nazare told Reuters as she watered around her brother's house in Macao. "I'm more afraid for his house than mine because his house is made of wood and he's not here." -Reuters


July 22, 2019
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