PARIS, Aug. 9 (Xinhua) -- Wildfires were still rampaging across southeastern France on Tuesday, with several firefighters injured and thousands of residents evacuated.
In the mountains of Diois in the department of Drome, wildfires that broke out on Friday are still not stabilized. Three firefighters have now been injured and 180 hectares of land burned, French daily newspaper Le Figaro reported on Tuesday.
240 firefighters were mobilized to bring the wildfires under control. However, local authorities say that due to shifting winds, the fires are spreading towards homes located downhill.
Aerial fire brigades were mobilized on Tuesday to help the firefighters located at the bottom of the summit.
Meanwhile, 140 kilometers away in the mountains of Chartreuse in the Isere department, wildfires broke out on Friday due to lightning. Local media reported that 130 hectares of land were burned, and three firefighters were injured out of 380 who were mobilized to tackle the blaze, along with the aerial fire brigade.
The wildfires are not stable but no progression has been reported since Tuesday morning, said local authorities. Meanwhile, 170 people were evacuated on Sunday, and several roads are still closed.
Additional wildfires in the departments of Lozere and Aveyron that broke out on Monday evening burned over 700 hectares of land, and over 3,000 people had to be evacuated. According to Le Figaro, more than 600 firefighters were deployed on Tuesday morning.
The fire in Lozere broke out on Monday evening due to an agricultural engine scraping tar from the road in the city of Massegros.
The extreme drought and heatwave in France have also contributed to the wildfires.
The villages of Riviere-sur-Tarn and Mostuejouls, and campsites in Aveyron were also evacuated.
"The flames were a few hundred meters away, the gendarmes and firefighters came to tell us to evacuate, we all had to leave during the night," bed and breakfast owner Gabin Castro told Le Figaro.
According to the European Forest Information System (EFFIS), more than 47,000 hectares of land have been burned in wildfires in France since the beginning of the year. ■