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WILDFIRES

Firefighters make gains against Tenerife wildfire

Firefighters made gains in their battle against a vast wildfire on Tenerife on Sunday after better than expected overnight weather helped them keep the blaze from destroying homes on the Spanish holiday island, regional officials said.

Firefighters make gains against Tenerife wildfire
Clouds of smoke from a wildfire cover the sky over Guimar valley in the northeastern part of the Canary island of Tenerife. Photo: DESIREE MARTIN/AFP.

The huge fire broke out late Tuesday in a mountainous northeastern area, quickly morphing into the Canary Islands’ biggest-ever.

So far the blaze, which has a perimeter of 70 kilometres (43 miles), has burned through 8,400 hectares (20,800 acres), or just over four percent of Tenerife’s overall surface area, forcing more than 12,000 people to flee their homes.

Despite expectations of a difficult night, things went “much better than expected”, Canary Islands leader Fernando Clavijo said.

“We warned of a complex situation, with rising temperatures and wind… and it’s true the night started very hard with many calls saying the fire was very close to people’s homes,” he told reporters Sunday morning.

But the firefighters “worked very intensively” and got through the night without losing a single home to the blaze, he said, describing it as “almost a miracle”.

Montse Roman, technical head of the operation, said overnight operations were “mainly focused on defending infrastructure and homes on the northern flank of the fire”, confirming there had “not been any more evacuations or confinement orders”.

Some 20 aerial units were to join the battle against the blaze on Sunday alongside two more coordination units.

Late Saturday, Clavijo said the wildfire had so far displaced “a total of 12,279 people”, citing figures from the Guardia Civil police.

‘It will ruin us’

As the fire spread down the mountainside towards the northern town of La Matanza de Acentejo on Saturday afternoon, Candelaria Bencomo Betancor, a farmer in her 70s, looked on in anguish.

“The fire is close to our farm, we’ve got trucks, vans, chickens, everything… it’s a business that is going well but if the fire comes, it will totally ruin us,” she told AFPTV, on the verge of tears. “They have to do something because the fire is right there.”

So far the fire has affected 11 municipalities on Tenerife, the largest of the seven Canary Islands, with the emergency services saying air quality was affected across much of the island “due to the smoke generated by the fire”.

Pedro Martinez, who is in charge of firefighting efforts, said the blaze was “behaving like a sixth-generation wildfire” — a term referring to a mega forest fire, and efforts to tackle the flames were being hampered by the huge clouds of smoke and the wind.

The blaze has generated a vast pillar of smoke that now stretches some eight kilometres into the air, rising far above the summit of Mount Teide, the volcano that towers over the island.

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez is expected to visit the area on Monday.

Last year Spain suffered more than 500 blazes that destroyed more than 300,000 hectares, making it the worst-hit country in Europe, according to the European Forest Fire Information System (EFFIS).

So far this year, it has had 340 fires, which have ravaged almost 76,000 hectares, EFFIS figures show. 

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WILDFIRES

Weekend of fires in Spain’s Valencia sparks fears of arsonists on the loose

A series of wildfires in the Devesa del Saler forest area of Valencia have been causing growing concerns over pyromaniacs in the region, with other fires over the weekend in Alicante also likely to be intentional.

Weekend of fires in Spain's Valencia sparks fears of arsonists on the loose

The latest in this series of fires took place this weekend in the sugar cane fields around El Saler, near the Natural Park of Albufera and its lagoon.

Fortunately, the fires have now been brought under control, but Valencia mayor María José Catalá, has expressed “concern” at being told that it’s “very likely” the blazes were started intentionally.

“We cannot clearly say that it was accidental or intentional, but they tell me that everything seems to indicate that it is intentional,” she explained.

“For a few months now we’ve had a pyromaniac on the loose in Valencia”, Catalá stated, “an arsonist who is doing a lot of damage and an arsonist who, of course, has to be controlled”.

READ ALSO: Why are there so many forest fires in Spain? 

Towards the end of 2023, there was another spate of intentional fires in the same area, and in October Spanish Civil Guard arrested the man they believed to be responsible.

La Dehesa del Saler is a Mediterranean forest located between the Albufera lagoon, known as the birthplace of paella, and the sea, and covers around 800 hectares. Made up of countless different types of trees and home to various types of wildlife, it is an important natural habitat, which must be protected.

In order to control the latest fires, 30 and 40 firefighters were called up to help put it out. Catalá has promised that the City Council will do its job and install water cannons in the Devesa area and is reinforcing the workforce of municipal firefighters, improving facilities and providing them with “all possible material”.

“I am doing everything possible to let nothing happen to La Devesa, but we need the administration of justice to be forceful,” she continued.

Over the same weekend, there were a further four intentional fires started further south in Villajoyosa in Alicante province.

The first occurred on Cervantes Street, in a container, followed by another in Castelar Square, in the old town; one more on Varadero Avenue; and the last one on Puerto Avenue.

The incidents are now being investigated, and according to police sources, everything points to one person as being responsible for them.

To make matters worse, Valencia’s fires have also served as political ammunition, with far-right party Vox accusing left-wing opponents of somehow being involved.

Vox party member within the Valencia City Council, José Gosálbez hinted that the coincidence “stands out” as “since the Left lost power, the fires have multiplied, with 16 hectares of burnt area”.

The spokesperson for the Socialist Party of Valencia PSPV, Sandra Gómez, said his statements were those of “a political arsonist”, and “out of line”.

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