At least 10,000 people, including thousands of holidaymakers, were evacuated overnight after a new wildfire broke out in southern France, which was already battling massive blazes, authorities said yesterday.
The new fire broke out a day after France asked for Europe’s help to tackle the flames already raging in several spots on the tinder-dry south, including near the popular resort of Saint-Tropez.
Firefighters are also battling fires on the French Mediterranean island of Corsica and in Portugal.
Photo: Reuters
About 3,000 of the evacuees in southeast France were holidaymakers staying in campgrounds, some of whom ended up spending the night in sleeping bags on the beach.
“The evacuations, at least 10,000, followed the progression of the fire. It’s an area that doubles or triples its population in summer,” a fire service official said of the blaze near Bormes-les-Mimosas on the Mediterranean coast.
The number of people on France’s Cote d’Azur bulges in July and August as holidaymakers head to the beach, although the area is experiencing an exceptionally hot and dry summer that has made it especially vulnerable to fires.
On Tuesday more than 4,000 firefighters and troops backed by 19 water bombers had already been mobilized to extinguish the flames, which have left swathes of charred earth in their wake.
At least 12 firefighters have been injured and 15 police officers affected by smoke inhalation since the fires broke out on Monday, authorities said.
The blazes on Tuesday had devoured about 4,000 hectares of land along the Mediterranean coast, in the mountainous interior and on Corsica.
With strong winds and dry brush creating a dangerous mix, the government asked its EU partners to send two extra firefighting planes — a request immediately fulfilled by Italy, according to the EU.
However, one EU official said that a lack of spare parts was preventing all the aircraft required from being put into action.
French Minister of the Interior Gerard Collomb on Tuesday said that France would be adding six more firefighting planes to its fleet.
A fire in La Croix-Valmer near Saint-Tropez, a resort frequented by the rich and famous, had been contained, local fire chief Philippe Gambe de Vergnes said.
However, the blaze had already consumed 400 hectares of coastal forest in an area dotted with homes, he said.
More than 200 people had to be moved from the area.
La Croix-Valmer Deputy Mayor Rene Carandante described a desolate landscape of blackened headlands fringed by charred umbrella pines, where green forest had once framed the azure waters of the Mediterranean.
“It’s a disaster area. There’s nothing left,” he said.
Francois Fouchier, of the local coastal conservation group, said that local wildlife, such as the Hermann’s tortoise, would be victims of the fires.
“We are going to find burnt shells,” Fouchier said.
About 80km inland, 300 hectares of pines and oaks went up in smoke near the village of Saint-Maximin-la-Sainte-Baume. A local official accused the authorities of failing to regularly remove dry undergrowth, making the forest a fire hazard.
Corsica, situated midway between France and Italy, was also assessing the damage.
A resident, whose house had at one point been in danger, spoke of “apocalyptic” scenes.
In the end, disaster was averted after the wind died down, but the blaze engulfed 1,800 hectares of forest and burned several vehicles.
In Carros, north of Nice, a house, three vehicles and a warehouse went up in flames, regional authorities said.
Speaking to France Info radio, local mayor Charles Scibetta described waking up to a “lunar landscape” and said residents had a lucky escape.
“All of France is mobilized,” Colonel Gregory Allione, head of the fire service in southeast France, told France Info, adding that extra firefighters had been drafted in from the north.
Thomas Curt, a director at the institute for research into the environment and agriculture, said a drop-off in farming in southeast France since the 1970s had made it more prone to fires.
“Farmland is contracting and the forest is naturally expanding, making the area bushier,” he said.
A proliferation in the numbers of homes, roads and power lines near forests also increased the fire hazard, he added.
In the middle of this month, a blaze believed to have been ignited by a cigarette butt tossed out of a car ripped through 800 hectares of land near Aix-en-Provence.
Portugal, , which last month suffered deadly forest fires, has been battling fresh blazes since Sunday in the center of the country, forcing the evacuation of about 10 villages.
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