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FIRE STORM
Canada announces aid for evacuees as fires continue to blaze
by Staff Writers
Kamloops, Canada (AFP) July 19, 2017


Firefighting planes battle flames near Croatia's Dubrovnik
Zagreb (AFP) July 20, 2017 - Firefighting planes helped bring a fresh blaze near Croatia's Adriatic resort of Dubrovnik under control Thursday, but scores of emergency personnel remained on alert further north.

Four planes were sent to the area near the border with Montenegro to prevent the spread of the fire, a defence ministry statement said.

The fire was under control in the late afternoon, a local firefighting commander was quoted as saying by national HRT television channel.

But further north, where about a dozen wildfires broke out on Sunday in the villages surrounding the popular tourist destination of Split, around 240 firefighters were still deployed to keep the situation under control.

Nobody has been injured in the blazes, which have ravaged more than 4,500 hectares (11,100 acres) of land in Croatia, destroying olive trees, pine trees and vegetation in Croatia.

Investigators are still trying to establish what caused the fires, but Interior Minister Davor Bozinovic has rejected speculation that they were caused by sparks from electrical power lines.

Both Croatia and neighbouring Montenegro have been hit by forest fires along their Adriatic coastlines in recent days.

In Montenegro, most of the fires were under control by Wednesday.

But fires in the country's Lustica peninsula forced the evacuation of more than 100 campers and threatened Tivat and neighbouring Herceg Novi and Kotor in the border region with Bosnia and Croatia.

As forest fires raged Wednesday in western Canada, the provincial government extended a state of emergency and announced aid for tens of thousands of people evacuated because of the disaster.

Around 140 fires were burning in British Columbia on the Pacific coast, and more than half of them remained out of control, firefighting officials said.

Four of those 140 -- down from an earlier figure of 150 -- are newly declared fires. All told the flames have forced at least 46,000 people from their homes.

Each household evacuated will receive aid of Can$600 ($480), British Columbia Premier John Horgan said.

That amount will double for families unable to return home over the next two weeks, Horgan said.

He also said a state of emergency that was first declared July 7 and set to expire Friday will be extended by two weeks.

That declaration gave emergency responders, forestry officials and police the authority "to take every action necessary to fight these wildfires and protect residents and their communities," according to a government statement issued July 7.

"We have had many challenges happen and we have more ahead of us," Horgan said. "A coordinated, strong response is important."

Nearly 3,000 firefighters aided by 200 water-dumping helicopters and planes are fighting the fires, and reinforcements are on the way.

Rain is forecast in some areas of British Columbia, but the flames are being fueled by bone-dry conditions and fanned by strong winds.

On the eastern slope of the Rocky Mountains, the fires forced the partial closure of some of Canada's most prized national parks, including Banff in the province of Alberta, which is visited annually by some four million tourists.

Since April, 674 fires have charred 3,530 square kilometers (1,400 square miles) of land. The cost for firefighting and other emergency crews alone has reached more than Can$105 million.

Authorities have yet to give a figure on how many buildings have been destroyed by the fires or the overall economic toll of the disaster.

In Alberta, authorities on Wednesday barred people from lighting campfires.

The province was hit hard last year by forest fires that forced the evacuation of 100,000 people from the oil-producing city of Fort McMurray.

FIRE STORM
Montenegro asks for international help to fight fires
Podgorica, Montenegro (AFP) July 17, 2017
Montenegro asked Monday for international help to fight wildfires in the Lustica peninsula on the country's Adriatic coast, while forest fires in neighbouring Croatia spread to suburbs of the coastal city of Split. "The situation at Lustica is critical. The interior ministry of Montenegro asked for the European Union Civil Protection Mechanism" to be activated to help extinguish the fire, th ... read more

Related Links
Forest and Wild Fires - News, Science and Technology


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