Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

Victims

Four-year-old boy whose parents were on honeymoon among dead in Portugal fires

At least 64 people have died in fires that swept through the centre of the country at the weekend.

plane A firefighting aircraft drops water over a fire outside the village of Pedrogao Grande, central Portugal yesterday Paulo Duarte / AP/Press Association Images Paulo Duarte / AP/Press Association Images / AP/Press Association Images

A CHILD WHO died in the flames during his parents’ honeymoon, a family saved by a water tank, and a group of friends rescued by a generous neighbour.

These are some of the stories of dozens of Portuguese whose lives were rocked by fires that swept through the centre of the country at the weekend.

At least 64 people have died in the fires. Firefighters are still tackling blazes in several locations.

The parents of four-year-old Rodrigo were on their honeymoon when they heard news of the devastating fire sweeping through the village of Nodeirinho in the Leiria region.

The newlyweds had left their little boy with his uncle and aunt, the Correio da Manha newspaper reported. Unable to get hold of them, Rodrigo’s mother pleaded for help on social media to find her child.

His grandmother had rushed from Lisbon to try to find him, but the bodies of Rodrigo and his uncle were found beside a car, caught by the flames as they tried to flee.

Water tank escape 

While several residents of the village of Pobrais were killed while trying to flee roadside flames, the Ferreira family survived by taking refuge in a small water tank a few metres from their door.

Maria do Ceu, a 52-year-old housewife, her husband, a 68-year-old who was formerly in the merchant navy, and their two daughters aged in their 30s told AFP of their “indescribable” fear.

“I knew we would be safe if we stayed in the water,” one of the daughters, a forest engineer, said. “We tried to convince our neighbours to stay, we begged them, but they still left” by car, towards the road where 11 of them were found dead.

Refuge from the flames 

A 60-year-old widow’s home, the most modern in Nodeirinho, became a refuge from the raging fire destroying house after house in the village, the Expresso newspaper reported.

Two panicked couples from Lisbon and three children, who had been caught in the flames as they returned from lunch with friends, knocked on Adelaide Silva’s door, pleading for shelter.

fire A man attempts to contain a forest fire threatening a nearby commercial fruit grove outside Derreada Cimeira, around 180 kilometres northeast of Lisbon Peter Kneffel / DPA/PA Images Peter Kneffel / DPA/PA Images / DPA/PA Images

Silva welcomed the family, before letting in an eighth survivor who had been trying to escape by car with her husband.

However, the fire had quickly caught up with the couple, killing the husband while his wife managed to escape with burns to her face, arms and back. One of the women who had already taken refuge in the house, a nurse, wrapped her in wet towels until she was later taken to hospital.

Livelihood destroyed 

Virgilio Godinho and his wife Isabel saw their small farm, together with their orchard, olive grove, vegetable garden and pick-up truck go up in flames in the village of Vilas de Pedro.

The couple and their 18-year-old daughter escaped because they were attending a wedding in another village.

Isabel Godinho, 63, tearfully told AFP: “We lost everything, I do not how we will eat, I’m going crazy.”

Virgilio, an unemployed mechanic, lost his entire tool collection.

“It was fortunate we were not there because I would have tried to save our possessions and then the worst could have happened,” he said.

© AFP 2017

Read: Portugal in mourning as firefighters continue to battle deadly wildfire

Read: Death toll from raging Portuguese forest fire rises to at least 62

Your Voice
Readers Comments
9
    Submit a report
    Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
    Thank you for the feedback
    Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.