Perilous Times and Climate Change
12 August 2010 Last updated at 04:44 ET
Deadly Wildfires rage on in Portugal
Over Fifty fires are reportedly burning in parts of the country
Portuguese firefighters are continuing to battle dozens of forest fires
that are sweeping through the country and have killed two of their
colleagues.
Over 50 fires are burning in central and northern parts of the country,
according to the Reuters news agency.
The country's civil defence agency says that 1,500 firefighters have
been mobilised to tackle the blazes.
Around 18,000 hectares (44,500 acres) of forests and bushland are now
believed to have been affected.
Temperatures in some areas were forecast to reach 40C (104 degrees
Fahrenheit).
Areas affected by the forest fires
Portugal's only national park - the Peneda-Geres National Park in the
north-west of the country - is one of the areas under threat.
Earlier this month the civil defence services registered 1,000 new
fires over a single weekend, a record high for the year.
Trapped by flames
The firefighting attempt has been hampered by strong winds that have
whipped up the fires.
Portuguese civil protection officials say a female firefighter died
after being trapped by flames in Gondomar region.
In a separate incident, a fireman was killed after his vehicle fell
into a burning ravine in the mountainous Sao Pedro do Sul area.
The current fires are the latest to have hit Portugal in recent years.
In 2006, six firefighters were killed whilst tackling a wildfire in the
centre of the country.
And in 2003, 18 people were killed in fires described as "the worst in
living memory".