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At least two die as wildfires hit Portugal, Europe sends assistance

At least 2 people died as wildfires raged in central and northern Portugal on Monday, forcing authorities to evacuate villages, close motorways and ask the European Union to send more water-bombing airplane.

The circumstance was most harmful in the northwestern Aveiro district where one forest blaze reached the borders of the town of Albergaria-a-Velha and burned numerous houses, the mayor said.

More than 1,100 firefighters were battling that fire and three others in the surrounding location. Cops shut a stretch of the main highway in between Lisbon and Porto as thick smoke blanketed the location.

Authorities stated officers had actually found the remains of a guy who had actually obviously been working for a forestry business close by.

In the very same area, another individual died of a cardiovascular disease as the fire approached, and 2 people were in hospital with severe injuries, according to the civil protection service.

Authorities said they had actually released 12 water-bombing aircraft in that district and were battling a minimum of 20 fires throughout the nation.

The government asked for 8 more aircraft from the European Commission under the EU civil protection mechanism known as RescEU.

2 shown up from Spain, and two were anticipated from France, an Interior Ministry representative informed Reuters. Greece said it would send out two Canadair CL-415 planes.

The scenario would likely worsen amidst unusually dry conditions and wind gusts of up to 70 kph (43 mph), national emergency and civil protection commander Andre Fernandes stated.

He planned to preserve the existing unique red alert status across mainland Portugal.

Albergaria-a-Velha Mayor Antonio Loureiro told press reporters the fire had burned down four homes and was threatening 20 more as it raged in the industrial and property perimeter of the town of around 25,000 people.

Temperature levels topped 30 degrees Celsius (86 degrees Fahrenheit) throughout the country over the weekend and Monday, and were expected to stay high into Tuesday.

Portugal and neighbouring Spain have tape-recorded less fires than usual after a rainy start to the year. But both stay susceptible to the increasingly hot and dry conditions that researchers have actually blamed on global warming.

(source: Reuters)