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Wildfires, fanned and fueled by heatwaves and strong winds, rage throughout Europe, destroying houses and factories

On Wednesday, wildfires caused either by arsonists, thunderstorms, or a combination of both, fanned along by heatwaves and strong winds, continued to rage in southern Europe, destroying homes, factories, and farms, and forcing thousands of tourists and residents to evacuate.

A wildfire that spread through forests, olive groves, and the suburbs of Patras in northern Peloponnese (west of Athens) set fire to a cement plant. The smoke and flames were thick.

What does it look? It looks like a doomsday. "May God help us, and help these people," said Giorgos Karavanis. He was a volunteer from Athens who came to Patras for help.

On Tuesday, authorities ordered the evacuation of residents in a town near Patras of approximately 7,700 residents. They issued new alerts Wednesday advising residents to leave two nearby villages.

Authorities warned people on the popular tourist islands of Chios in the east and Cephalonia in the west to get to safety because fires were spreading.

A volunteer firefighter in Spain died of severe burns, and several others were hospitalised after the state weather agency AEMET issued a warning that fire was a very high or extreme risk throughout Spain.

Officials in the region said that the 35-year old man was trying to build firebreaks in the area of Nogarejas in central Castile-Leon when he became trapped by the fire.

This is the sixth wildfire-related death in Spain this year. According to emergency services, two other victims are firefighters from Tarragona & Avila.

Alexander Held, senior expert in fire-management at the European Forest Institute, warned that firefighters' lives are at risk when they work in landscapes not prepared.

He said that authorities should do more to prevent and anticipate wildfires, by clearing combustible plants and creating buffer zones.

Held stated that firefighters in an industrial building would refuse to enter if there were no fire alarms, sprinkler systems, fire protection doors, or escape routes.

Alfonso Rueda is the leader of Galicia in the northwest. He called the situation "complicated", and said that the weather conditions were not helpful. Six fires are burning in the province of Ourense, Galicia. The combined area is 10,000 hectares.

ARSON SUSPECTED

Sara Aagesen, Spanish Environment Minister, told SER Radio that arsonists were suspected of causing many fires in the country due to their "virulence".

A male firefighter arrested on Tuesday was responsible for the fires that started in Avila, north of Madrid, two weeks ago. Meanwhile police announced late on Tuesday that they were investigating a woman aged 63 for allegedly setting a number of fires in Galicia’s Muxia region in August.

Europa Press reported that the police have identified a suspect believed to have burns on his hands from starting a small blaze in a development along the southern coast of Cadiz.

Thunderstorms caused fires in other places.

Residents in Andalucia flooded the fire department with calls on Tuesday shortly after 5 pm, alerting them to a fire that was caused by lightning striking a chestnut-oak forest north of Huelva. Around 250 people were evacuated, but the fire was mostly under control by Wednesday morning.

The civil protection service reported that a fire in Trancoso, Portugal that had been burning since the weekend took a turn in the worst direction during the night when a lightning re-ignited a zone that was previously considered safe.

Albania's Defence Minister Pirro Vegu described it as a "critical" week, with major fires burning all over the country.

The defence ministry reported that on Wednesday, more than 10,000 firefighters, soldiers, and police emergency units battled 24 wildfires in total across the country.

Two villages in the middle of the country were forced to flee when flames broke out in their homes. The villagers took their livestock along with them.

Hajri dragoti from Narte said, "We're going to the middle of the two rivers, because the fire is here." He fled with his wife, taking a donkey, a cow and a pet dog. "We can do nothing, it's like gun powder."

Spain is in the 10th day of a record-breaking heatwave. The temperatures peaked at 45 degrees Celsius on Tuesday, and AEMET expects it to continue until Monday.

Pope Leo moved the weekly audience he holds in St. Peter's Square into an indoor venue at the Vatican "to avoid the extreme heat and sun" after the Italian health ministry issued heat alerts on Wednesday for 16 cities, with Florence's temperatures expected to reach 39C.

(source: Reuters)