BFF-63 Sweden’s wildfires abating, foreign firefighters leave

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BFF-63

SWEDEN-FORESTRY-FIRES-FRANCE

Sweden’s wildfires abating, foreign firefighters leave

STOCKHOLM, July 31, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Wildfires that have been raging across
Sweden are abating, Swedish authorities said Tuesday, as French, Italian and
German firefighters who came to assist gradually leave the country.

Two Canadair firefighting aircraft, dispatched from France to Sweden in
mid-July, departed on Tuesday, days after planes from Italy and Portugal
returned home.

Swedish emergency services SOS Alarm said meanwhile there were 10 fires
all under control on Tuesday, half the number registered last week and far
below the 45 to 70 fires reported earlier in July.

There has been practically no rainfall in Sweden since the beginning of
May, aside from a few millimetres in mid-June and some brief rainstorms at
the weekend that brought some relief.

The drought and high temperatures — Sweden registered the hottest month
of July in two centuries, with temperatures hovering around 30 degrees
Celsius (86 Fahrenheit) — led to wildfires across the country from mid-July,
from the south up to the Arctic Circle.

No casualties have been reported.

The Nordic country, where summer temperatures are usually closer to 23
Celsius, is under-equipped to deal with this kind of natural catastrophe and
asked for help from Italy, Germany, Norway, Denmark, Poland and France.

“The two French aircraft are leaving Sweden today,” a spokesman for the
Swedish Civil Contingencies Agency (MSB), Gunno Ivansson, told AFP.

Some 60 French firefighters concluded their mission on Tuesday, and were
to return to France on Thursday.

“The Danish and Polish troops are the last ones and are scheduled to leave
Sweden on August 4 and 6, but this might change if the situation changes,”
another MSB spokesman, Anders Thoren, said.

According to Swedish officials, “approximately 20,000 hectares” of forests
have burned up.

Meanwhile, the Swedish government on Monday announced 1.2 billion kronor
(117 million euros, $137 million) in aid to help farmers hit hard by the
drought.

The aid is intended to help farmers buy feed for their livestock given a
shortage of grass and hay.

BSS/AFP/RY/1830 hrs