News Flash

BARCELONA, July 5, 2026 (BSS/AFP) - Hundreds of firefighters battled forest
infernos in France, Spain and Portugal on Sunday as temperatures rose again
in heatwave-scarred Europe.
The latest wildfires have already devastated more than 17,000 hectares
(42,000 acres) of land -- twice the size of Manhattan -- across the three
countries where temperatures in some places were predicted to touch 40C on
Sunday.
Authorities registered thousands of excess deaths during one of Europe's
worst heatwaves in June, and with more extreme weather on the way, France's
Interior Minister Laurent Nunez has already expressed concern that the annual
summer wildfire season had started a month early.
A fire near Spain's northeastern Costa Brava coast burned more than 2,200
hectares in two days and firefighters said their operation on Sunday would be
"complicated" by rising temperatures and the many "smoking hotspots" within
the fire's perimeter.
Firefighters "worked tirelessly throughout the night to consolidate the
perimeter of the La Bisbal d'Empord... forest fire, which is now stabilized,"
said a Catalunya fire service statement.
Catalunya regional government president Salvador Illa said that a man had
been detained in connection with the fire which has badly hit the Gavarres
protected natural area between Barcelona and the French border.
Nearly 600 French firefighters have been mobilised to contain a wildfire that
has burned more than 1,000 hectares on a mountainside at Trevillach, about 36
kilometers (20 miles) east of Perpignan.
- More trouble ahead -
Roads in the region have been closed and the authorities have ordered mayors
to open emergency shelters for people who could be forced to flee their
homes.
Another 300 French firefighters battled another forest fire in a mountainous
district of the southeastern Drome department.
In Portugal, emergency services said they had controlled "80 percent" of a
wildfire that has devastated some 13,000 hectares of forest and scrub land in
the north of the country.
A senior civil protection officer Jose Costa told AFP that the fire had
spread 35km since it started on Thursday and that 1,200 firefighters had been
involved in the battle.
Spain and Italy sent reinforcements and water carrying planes after Portugal
appealed for help to fight the inferno that has left nine people injured by
burns.
Several regions across Portugal, Spain and southern France stepped up heat
alerts on Sunday as temperatures rose again. On Monday the latest heatwave
was expected to move north. Forecasters say it could last until next weekend.
Western Europe has already seen heatwaves this year in May and June that
would have been "virtually impossible" without climate change, the World
Weather Attribution group of scientists said.
Following a two-week surge in temperatures in June, France said there had
been more than 2,000 extra deaths than usual in just one week, while Spain
and Belgium each reported more than 1,000.
Authorities in several countries fear more summer trouble ahead.
"Climate change is here, we are living the consequences and it is only the
start of July," said French fire service Colonel Eric Belgioino as he made an
appeal for people near the Pyrenees inferno to take precautions to avoid
starting fires.
"The season is going to be long for the soldiers fighting fires. You have to
help us," he said.