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Questions over fire response as Portugal battles blaze

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Pedrógão Grande: Questions were mounting Tuesday about the government’s response to the raging forest fires that have claimed 64 lives, as more than 1,000 firefighters battled to contain it.


The blaze around Pedrogao Grande was expected to be under control shortly, said civil protection chief Vitor Vaz Pinto.


But as water-bombing planes made regular passes over the flames, there were growing questions as to whether the response to the disaster could have been better.


There were also suggestions that forestry practices and outdated emergency planning might have contributed to the disaster.


Some people in the hamlets scattered through this rural region were not happy with the response of the emergency services.


Father Jose Gomes, the priest in Figueiro dos Vinhos, said that some locals had “lacked the support of the fire fighters, and sometimes even water.”


“There is a spirit of revolt towards the emergency services,” he said.


Other people were asking if the roads where so many people died had been closed quickly enough on Saturday when the fires started.


Of the 64 people who died, 47 of them perished on the N236 highway, 30 of them trapped in their cars as the flames surrounded them.


An additional 157 were listed as injured, the emergency services said. They included seven people in a serious state, one of them a child.


Details were emerging of the victims, many of whom were caught in their cars as they tried to flee the blaze. They included a four-year-old boy, Rodrigo.


His parents had left with him with relatives while on honeymoon and posted frantic messages on social media when they heard about the fires sweeping through the village of Nodeirinho in the Leiria region.


The bodies of Rodrigo and his uncle were found burnt beside a car, caught by the flames as they tried to flee the inferno.


On Tuesday, 1,150 firefighters and nearly 400 vehicles were still battling the fires, helped from the air by water-bombing planes including some sent from France, Italy and Spain.


Press reports suggested that the fire plan had not been revised for four years and that there had been communications problems while trying to contain the blaze.


Portugal’s Publico newspaper reported that while the fire plan was meant to be revised every two years, in recent years lawmakers had not considered it a priority.


Le Jornal de Noticias said emergency services communications antennae had been damaged by the heat of the fires, hampering the work of the firefighters.


Climate change expert Joao Camargo pointed to the industrial-scale planting of eucalyptus, which is highly inflammable, in comments to Publico.


“These last decades, we have seen a rise in the frequency of forest fires” in Portugal, more than in other Mediterranean countries, he said.


— AFP


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