French officials confirmed on Tuesday that “thousands of people have been evacuated as a precautionary measure,” as around 750 emergency personnel battle an intense wildfire near the tourist resort of Saint-Tropez.
The wildfire was sparked by a blaze that started at a motorway stop 60 miles from the French city of Toulon, spreading to more than 3,500 hectares of forest by Tuesday morning, according to a statement from the local fire department.
Le Var subit un effroyable incendie qui nous rappelle ceux de 2003 et de 2017Tout mon soutien aux 750 pompiers mobilisés, qui nous protègent en permanence et dont il ne faut jamais oublier l’engagementL’incendie est actuellement dans le Golfe de Saint-Tropez, soyons vigilants pic.twitter.com/5v6EWt5mUI
Speaking to the media, fire-service spokesperson Delphine Vienna said that “thousands of people have been evacuated as a precautionary measure” by emergency personnel, with “no victims” reported so far despite the “very fierce” blaze.
? #incendievar : Plusieurs milliers de personnes ont été évacuées préventivement dans l’arrière-pays de #SaintTropez, 19 personnes ont été intoxiquées et 3 légèrement blessées.Quelque 750 #pompiers luttent contre ce feu qui est toujours très virulent. #Varpic.twitter.com/SMtvt8EGCD
The evacuation has, so far, mainly been around the popular tourist resort of Saint-Tropez and nearby villages of Le Mole and Grimaud. The area for evacuation may be extended, as the fire is “spreading at a speed of four kilometers an hour.”
Ook de bossen in Zuid-Frankrijk staan nu in lichterlaaie, tot 50 km van Saint-Tropez.Vuurzee in het nachtelijk duister. pic.twitter.com/6uk76GBCfC
French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin will visit the impacted areas on Tuesday, as authorities engage in a “very difficult battle” to contain the blaze. The south of France is the latest European region to be impacted by blazing wildfires, as hot and arid temperatures fuel the spread of fires through woodlands and forest, forcing firefighters to rapidly evacuate residents and tourists, sometimes by sea.
Greece, Italy, Spain and Turkey have all struggled to bring blazes under control in recent weeks, as fires spread through forest and farmland, bearing down on villages and towns. Similarly, Algeria and Bolivia have experienced fierce wildfires that have torn through vast swaths of land, with experts warning that global warming will continue to create a climate that fuels such devastating blazes.
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