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Heatwave Turns Southeastern Europe Into Tinderbox As Fires Rage

A woman and a child pass through burned cars in the San Nicola Camping, 25 July 2007 in Peschici, a day after wildfires claimed two lives in southern Italy's Puglia region. The coastguard evacuated hundreds of people from beaches hit by the blazes. Strong winds were stoking fires in several areas while grounding firefighting helicopters as hundreds of forest and brush fires continued to burn in central and southern Italy amid searing temperatures. Photo courtesy AFP.

Wildfires rage unabated in central, southern Italy
Rome (AFP) July 25 - Wildfires raged unabated across central and southern Italy on Wednesday, the day after two people perished in a blaze in Apulia, public safety officials said. "We've had 50 calls so far already for airborne intervention against fires," one official, Luca Spoletini, told AFP mid-morning. "The situation is similar to that of the past few days, with most of the fires in the centre and south of the country. The worst situations are in Sicily and Calabria," he said. Southern Italy is sweltering under a heatwave that has brought temperatures often exceeding 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit). In Apulia on Tuesday, two people were burned alive in their car near the Adriatic coastal town of Peschici. Hundreds of people were evacuated by sea after wildfires trapped them on beaches. Fires are raging in Abruzzi, Latium, Calabria, Sicily and Sardinia where two Spanish Canadairs are helping Italian firefighters. "We currently have in the air all our firefighting resources: 12 Canadairs, five public safety helicopters and a dozen other helicopters belonging to other services," Spoletini said. "The alert remains high across the country, but Wednesday morning the situation seemed calmer," said fire services spokesman Luca Cari. "We have doubled the personnel rotations to ensure a stronger presence ... and we have transferred personnel from the north of the country to the south to help us," he told AFP. The firefighters carried out some 2,000 missions on Tuesday, according to their operational centre. Nearly 8,000 firefighters including some 1,000 volunteers took part backed up by more than 2,000 vehicles, four boats and 10 helicopters.
by Staff Writers
Rome (AFP) July 25, 2007
Southeastern Europe was a tinderbox Wednesday in the grip of an unrelenting heatwave that has claimed hundreds of lives as wildfires swept Italy and bit into a national park in Slovakia. Italy was sweltering under temperatures close to 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit) in places Wednesday and suffering devastating wildfires in central and southern regions. "We've had 85 calls so far already for airborne intervention against fires," a public safety official told AFP in the afternoon as fires raged in the Abruzzo, Latium, Calabria, Sicily and Sardinia regions.

More than 5,000 hectares (12,500 acres) of farmland have been destroyed, worth some one billion euros (1.4 billion dollars), according to the Italian Farmers Confederation.

In southeastern Apulia on Tuesday, two people were burned alive in their car near the Adriatic coastal town of Peschici, while on Monday a pilot died when his Canadair plane crashed while he was fighting a fire in mountainous Abruzzo.

"The alert remains high across the country," fire services spokesman Luca Cari told AFP earlier. "We have doubled the personnel rotations to ensure a stronger presence ... and we have transferred personnel from the north of the country to the south to help us."

In Romania authorities said the heatwave-related death toll rose to 33 with three more people succumbing on Tuesday.

In the capital Bucharest where temperatures reached 37 degrees Celsius (99 Fahrenheit) more than 170 people fainted in the street. Ambulance services received a record of more than 1,200 calls over the past 24 hours, according to the Mediafax news agency.

Power flickered on and off in Bucharest where air conditioners were working overtime.

Some 30 people died in a heatwave last month in Romania.

In Slovakia a lightning strike sparked a huge forest fire on Sunday that was still raging across about 10 hectares of the Slovensky Raj (Slovakian Paradise) national park in the east of the country.

Meanwhile the mercury reached 46 degrees Celsius (115 F) in parts of Greece, where a dozen forest fires were burning and up to five people have died from heat-related causes since Monday.

Authorities set up air-conditioned shelters in Athens and Greece's second largest city Salonika, while fire forced the evacuation of a monastery, a village and a summer camp near the southern town of Aigion.

Another fire on the Ionian island of Kefalonia threatened some nearby towns, firefighters said.

Greeks were warned to stay indoors and help conserve electricity between 11:00 am and 3:00 pm to prevent power outages.

"Until (Wednesday evening) when the heatwave passes, we ask for restraint," Interior Minister Prokopis Pavlopoulos said, adding: "We don't need to have the air-conditioning on all day long."

The heatwave caused a spike in smog pollution in Athens, with ozone levels above emergency limits in several districts, prompting the government to urge motorists to avoid the city centre. Ozone levels were not expected to improve on Thursday.

The fire department said 99 blazes had broken out around Greece since Tuesday, added to hundreds of fires that have burned thousands of hectares of forest and agricultural land since a first heat wave last month.

Temperatures in Greece were expected to drop slightly over the next two days.

Hungary, where up to 500 people may have died last week from heat-related causes, enjoyed a significant drop in temperatures overnight with the welcome arrival of a cool front.

Highs on Wednesday did not exceed 28 degrees Celsius (83 F), down from nearly 40 degrees Celsius (104 F) on Tuesday.

A third degree heat alert -- the highest ever applied in the country before last week -- ended on Tuesday.

On the western edge of Europe, even without a heatwave Portuguese firefighters are battling blazes near Abrantes, about 100 kilometres (60 miles) north of Lisbon, and in the Caldeirao mountains in the south.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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Southern Europe Braces For More Fires As Arson Suspected
Rome (AFP) July 26, 2007
Three heat-related deaths were reported in Greece Thursday as southern Europe blistered under a devastating heatwave and environmentalists blamed many of the fires raging in Italy on arsonists. Greek authorities said two elderly women were found dead Thursday in the Peloponnese village of Diakofto where a fire was raging for a third day. A 76-year-old man died Wednesday evening in another fire in the village of Mamoussia.







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