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THREE PEOPLE WERE killed and around a thousand forced to flee last night as fires engulfed the Portuguese island of Madeira and flames reached the capital Funchal, according to rescuers.
The three victims died in their homes close to Funchal’s historic centre while local media reported that two others were seriously injured by the raging inferno that has gripped Madeira, a popular tourist destination in the eastern Atlantic.
The Irish Department of Foreign Affairs and the Irish Embassy in Lisbon have not received any requests for assistance, but are monitoring the situation.
A vast ball of smoke was seen above Funchal yesterday with the evening sky turned orange by the flames, prompting locals to photograph the scene from surrounding hills.
Fires began in the hills around Funchal on Monday night with the situation worsening dramatically yesterday evening as strong winds fanned the flames, spreading the blaze to other parts of the city.
Some evacuees have been forced to sleep in military bases since the blaze started, said Rubina Leal, the head of Madeira’s Civil Protection office.
Others have been moved to a football stadium to wait for the fire to be tackled, according to Funchal mayor Paulo Cafofo, quoted by the Lusa news agency.
Spate of forest fires
“Roughly a thousand people had to be evacuated from homes and hotels,” among them both residents and tourists, Cafofo said.
At least one hotel in the city, a popular tourist destination and cruise ship port, was damaged by the blaze but Cafofo said it was “impossible” to estimate how many buildings might have been affected.
Yesterday, hospitals and old people’s homes were evacuated as flames advanced on built-up areas.
Overnight, Portugal dispatched a team of 110 specialists including firefighters, police and doctors to help bolster the island’s response to the blaze while the Azores, another Portuguese territory in the Atlantic ocean, deployed 30 men to assist.
Mainland Portugal has also been struck by a spate of forest fires since Friday with the north of the country, where temperatures have surged to 35 degrees Celsius (95 degrees Fahrenheit), particularly badly affected.
Today about half of the north was on alert for fires with the risk assessed as between “heightened” and “maximum”.
More than 3,000 people have been battling to contain roughly 100 fires across the country with 12 major blazes leading to the evacuation of local residents overnight.
Prime Minister Antonio Costa said yesterday he would request assistance from other European countries and Russia if the blazes do not abate by August 15.
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