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Russia forest fires spread in record heatwave

A firefighter works to extinguish a peat fire in a forest near the village Ryazanovka outside Moscow on July 29, 2010. Photo courtesy AFP

As forest fires approach, Russian city prays for rain
Voronezh, Russia (AFP) Aug 1, 2010 - Residents of Voronezh prayed for rain Sunday as devastating forest fires ringed the central Russian city and firefighters hosed down charred houses in a suburb where two died in the flames. Around one hundred people, most of them elderly women, gathered for prayers in a small church in the southern suburb of Maslovka, where more than 100 houses have been destroyed in the fires sweeping central Russia. "We came to make the rain fall, to prevent more fires," said Natalya Treshchalina. "One hundred and forty houses burnt down here. It is terrible." The believers then walked in a procession to the site of the fire, carrying crosses and icons, as priests scattered holy water on the ruined houses.

"The rain really must come," said Natalya Vorodina, a middle-aged resident of the city, which lies some 500 kilometres south of Moscow, saying she came to the prayer ceremony to "support our people." Sparked by an unprecedented heatwave with temperatures of up to 40 degrees Celsius, the fires have killed at least 30 people and left more than 2,000 homeless -- 600 of them in the Voronezh region, according to reports. In Nizhny Novgorod, the region worst-hit by the fires, Patriarch Kirill, the head of the Russian Orthodox church, also urged believers Sunday to pray for rain. Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has promised that all the houses destroyed in fires will be rebuilt by October and has allocated five billion rubles to cover the costs.

But one elderly resident of Maslovka, Vera Sakharova, expressed scepticism. "They have given us nothing, and they won't give us anything," she predicted. "I do not know what we are going to do next." The firefighters came too late to save the village, she complained. "We had no help," she said. "We had to do everything ourselves." Firefighters from the emergency ministry on Sunday hosed the charred ruins to prevent the fire taking hold again after flames fanned by strong winds leapt swiftly between houses. "The grass is very dry and it is hot," warned firefighter Nikolai Elfimov. "Of course I am afraid of more fires, but we are doing all that we can to stop it happening."

"All the houses burned up at once," said another firefighter, Maxim Korolyov. "I did not even realise what was happening." "It's the first time that I have ever fought a fire like this," Korolyov said, admitting that he and his colleagues lacked practice. The Voronezh region -- an area almost the size of France -- has 30 fire stations, each with five fire engines, firefighters said. In the local fire station, firefighters said they had never faced a fire on this scale. "I have seen fires, but nothing this big," said a middle-aged firefighter, Sergei Kondrashev. "Every year there are fires here. This year, because of the weather, this has been on a grander scale."
by Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) Aug 1, 2010
Russian firefighters Sunday battled the flames of spreading forest fires that have already killed 30 people and devastated villages, but officials claimed some success in controlling the disaster.

The emergency situations ministry said it deployed hundreds of thousands of workers to fight the blazes, along with 2,000 members of the armed forces, as the situation worsened early Sunday due to temperatures hitting 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) and strong winds.

More than 5,000 people have been evacuated from their homes, the ministry said.

But later in the day, ministry spokeswoman Irina Andrianova announced that the situation had "improved considerably" in the last few hours.

"During the day today, fires flared up at 320 sites, and 210 have been put out," she said on Rossia 24 television.

She also said the total area engulfed by the wildfires had been reduced by 7,000 hectares to about 128,000 hectares (316,000 acres).

Still, with blistering temperatures forecast over the next few days as the country faces one of its worst heatwaves, the ministry has warned of an "extreme risk" of more forest fires.

Two more bodies were discovered Sunday in a burnt-out village in the Nizhny Novgorod region, the emergency ministry's regional branch said, raising the official death toll to 30.

In the Voronezh region, one of those worst-hit, almost 600 people have been left homeless, Russian television reported, showing residents evacuated to a hotel and volunteers bringing bags of clothes.

"There has never been a fire like this," fireman Maxim Korolyov told AFP in the village of Maslovka, where all but five of the 150 houses burnt down on Friday. "It's the first time I have had to fight a fire of this size.

Elderly resident Vera Sakharova complained that firefighters had come too late. "We did not have any help," she told AFP. "We had to do everything ourselves."

Sceptical of promises of state help, Sakharova predicted: "They have given us nothing, and they won't give us anything."

"I don't know what we are going to do after this," she added.

At least 1,875 houses have been destroyed in fires, leaving more than 2,000 people homeless, the regional development ministry said Sunday.

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin promised on television on Saturday that all the houses would be rebuilt by October, after allocating five billion rubles (165 million dollars).

The strongman leader on Friday visited a village in the worst affected Nizhny Novgorod region. In a televised encounter, tearful residents confronted Putin, who promised to rebuild their homes and embraced one of the women.

However, a video posted on YouTube showed Putin being heckled by a crowd of shouting residents.

"You aren't doing anything, everything is burning," one woman can be heard shouting in the footage, which has been viewed more than 30,000 times but was not shown on state television.

"Our administration is working very badly, it needs to be convicted," another woman shouts, as Putin is shown turning and walking away.

On Saturday Putin admitted the situation was "extremely tense" and berated officials for their tardy response, saying: "Not everything was done in a timely way, but now is not the time to squabble."

Putin is set to meet with the governors of the affected regions in Moscow on Monday.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, speaking from Sochi on Saturday, called the situation a "natural disaster of the kind that probably only happens every 30 or 40 years."

Medvedev did not visit the scene, but is in constant contact with regional governors, his press service told the ITAR-TASS news agency on Sunday.

Patriarch Kirill, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church, on Sunday held a service in the Nizhny Novgorod region and called for believers to pray for rain, the RIA Novosti news agency reported.



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