Fires force evacuation of 10,000 in 3 French Riviera towns
BORMES-LES-MIMOSAS (France) — Authorities ordered the evacuation of 10,000 people as fires hopscotched around the Riviera for a third day on Wednesday (July 26), tearing through the forest of La Londe-les-Maures.
BORMES-LES-MIMOSAS (France) — Authorities ordered the evacuation of 10,000 people as fires hopscotched around the Riviera for a third day on Wednesday (July 26), tearing through the forest of La Londe-les-Maures.
A violent fire took off in the dry Mediterranean forests around La Londe just before 11pm the night before, and 540 firefighters were sent into the region, the prefect of the Var region, the top state official, said in a statement.
The blaze was the latest of several wind-whipped fires that are ravaging forest and scrubland on the hills and slopes that spill into the Mediterranean sea between the Marseilles and the city of Nice in the southeastern corner of France.
About 3,000 campers were among the 10,000 evacuated from La Londe and nearby Bormes-les-Mimosas and La Lavandou the statement said. La Londe is less than 30km from the city of Toulon. Tourists from France and elsewhere flock each summer to the coast.
Four tracker planes and a fire-fighting aircraft were sent in. About 800 hectares of back-country forest had burned by morning.
Fires began raging along the coast on Monday, forcing smaller, scattered evacuations with flames reaching a corner of Saint-Tropez. Since noon on Tuesday, firefighters had conducted about 100 operations, the prefecture said.
Further east, reinforcements were sent in to battle a blaze in Artigues that burned up to 1,700 hectares of forested land.
Another fire was contained on Tuesday evening in La Croix Valmer after burning two villas, seriously injuring one firefighter and devouring about 500 hectares.
France’s Mediterranean coast is particularly vulnerable to fires, with its massive back-country forests, often dry in the summer, and Mistral winds blowing across the sea to fan flames. Smoke blew across the shores from the fires that were visible across bays on the picturesque coast, frightening some. But firefighters warned against panic. No injuries have been reported among residents and vacationers.
Further south, flames ate through some 2,000 hectares of forest on the northern end of the French Mediterranean island of Corsica, in what was the largest blaze. AP