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Thousands of people have had to flee their homes in Tenerife as firefighters and the army struggle to contain an “out of control” wildfire.

Nearly 4,500 people were ordered to leave villages and campsites after the fire started on Wednesday, with thousands more told to stay inside.

The blaze has already burned at least 6,425 acres.

“This is probably the most complicated blaze we have had on the Canary Islands, if not ever, in at least the last 40 years,” said regional leader Fernando Clavijo.

He said the fire was currently “out of control” and that it was a race against time before temperatures increase again at the weekend.

Santa Cruz, the island’s capital, is 12 miles (20km) from the flames.

Tenerife‘s tourism office said the fire was not near any of the main holiday areas and cities, which are said to be operating normally.

More on Tenerife

Read more:
Will ‘prime fire season’ force a change to our summer holidays forever?
What is the Fire Weather Index and how does it work?

Waterbombing planes have managed to stabilise the fire south of Mount Teide, Spain’s highest peak, but it remained out of control on the northern flank.

“When you go outside you start suffocating. It’s as if you have something stuck in your throat,” said Alba Gil, 37, who lives in the village of La Esperanza.

Firefighters worked overnight on flames near Arafo on Tenerife
Image:
Firefighters worked overnight on flames near Arafo on Tenerife

Elianna Diaz with her daughter and their horse in El Rosario, Tenerife
Image:
Elianna Diaz with her daughter and their horse in El Rosario

More than 3,800 people have been told to stay at home due to poor air quality, said civil protection chief Montse Roman, and more evacuations could follow.

Access to the mountains has been shut off, but the island’s two airports were said to be operating normally.

Seventeen aircraft and about 350 firefighters and military personnel are involved in the firefighting effort so far.

Seventeen planes are working on the fire, say authorities. Pic: AP
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Seventeen planes are working on the fire, say authorities. Pic: AP

The flames advance through the forest near the town of El Rosario, as wildfire continues to burn on Tenerife, Canary Islands, Wednesday, Aug. 16, 2023. An out-of-control wildfire on the Spanish Canary island of Tenerife has burned some 2,600 hectares (6,400 acres) of land and forced the evacuation of some 300 people from several small towns, Canary Islands regional president Fernando Clavijo said Thursday. (Europa Press via AP)
Image:
Smoke near a forest at El Rosario

Mr Clavijo said the fire’s perimeter was nearly 19 miles (30km) long.

“We are watching the big mountain and the blaze, we saw this firewall and we’ll see if they can control it, the situation seems pretty bad,” said local resident Celestino Suarez, 53.

A heatwave of more than 40C (104F) on the island last week left much of the ground bone dry.

Combination of satellite images shows the island of Tenerife before and during the wildfire, Spain August 13, 2023 (left) and August 16, 2023
Pic:Planet Labs PB
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Satellite images of Tenerife from 13 and 16 August

Tenerife is the latest place to experience an unusually serious wildfire this summer.

A blaze on nearby La Palma last month affected about 11,000 acres and led to more than 2,000 people being led to safety.

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The most devastating wildfire of recent months has been in Hawaii where at least 106 people died when flames ripped through a popular town on Maui.

Scientists say climate change is helping make extreme weather events more frequent.

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Friedrich Merz: German chancellor-in-waiting vows to ‘create unity’ in Europe

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Friedrich Merz: German chancellor-in-waiting vows to 'create unity' in Europe

Friedrich Merz, who is set to become the new German chancellor, has vowed to “create unity” in Europe as it adjusts to the new Trump administration and Russia’s war on Ukraine.

Mr Merz’s task will be complicated by the need to form a coalition with the centre-left Social Democrats of outgoing chancellor Olaf Scholz, who will remain in office for the immediate future.

He has repeatedly pledged not to work with the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, despite its second-place finish but which is under observation by the country’s intelligence agency for suspected right-wing extremism.

Mr Merz’s conservative Christian Democrats and their Bavarian sister party the Christian Social Union, which won with 28.5% of the votes, and the Social Democrats have a combined 328 seats in the 630-seat parliament.

The 69-year-old, who put toughening Germany’s immigration laws at the forefront of the election campaign, said he hopes to complete a deal by Easter.

Experts believe this could prove to be a challenging timescale as the rivals try to find common ground over key policies.

Co-leader of the Social Democrats, Lars Klingbeil, indicated a deal with Mr Merz is not a formality.

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The path to power may not be smooth for Merz

He said: “The ball is in Friedrich Merz’s court. Only the course of any talks will show whether a government can be formed.”

With US President Donald Trump back in the White House and tensions rising over how to resolve the war in Ukraine, Mr Merz wants to unify Europe in the face of challenges from the US and Russia.

“I have no illusions at all about what is happening from America,” he told supporters.

“We are under such massive pressure… my absolute priority now is really to create unity in Europe.”

Read more:
Who is Friedrich Merz – the trained pilot?
The woman at the top of Germany’s far-right AfD party

At a media conference later, he added: “There are three topics we need to talk about. Of course, external and security policy – especially following the statements coming out of Washington.

“It is clear that we as Europeans need to be able to act swiftly. We need to be able to defend ourselves. That is a topic that is a top priority in the next few weeks.”

Mr Merz said he remains “hopeful” of maintaining the transatlantic relationship, but warned if it “is destroyed, it will not only be to the detriment of Europe, it will also be to the detriment of America”.

On the other key issues, he added: “Another important topic is the immigration – that is an area where we have proposals. I suppose the Social Democrats will be prepared to talk to us about this as well.

“The third topic is the economic situation. We have to protect work in the industrial sector in Germany.”

He also earlier used social media to say “Europe stands unwaveringly by Ukraine’s side” and how “we must put Ukraine in a position of strength”.

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Pope Francis ‘resumes some work’ after ‘slight improvement’ in health, Vatican says

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Pope Francis 'resumes some work' after 'slight improvement' in health, Vatican says

Pope Francis’s health has shown a “slight improvement” but he remains in a critical condition, the Vatican has said.

The Pope, 88, has been at Rome’s Gemelli Hospital since 14 February and is being treated for double pneumonia and chronic bronchitis.

In a statement on Monday evening, the Vatican said: “The clinical conditions of the Holy Father, in their critical state, show a slight improvement.

“Even today there were no episodes of asthmatic respiratory crises; some laboratory tests improved.

“Monitoring of mild renal failure is not a cause for concern. Oxygen therapy continues, although with slightly reduced flow and oxygen percentage

“The doctors, considering the complexity of the clinical picture, are prudently not releasing the prognosis yet. In the morning he received the Eucharist, while in the afternoon he resumed work activity.

“In the evening he called the Parish Priest of the Parish of Gaza to express his paternal closeness. Pope Francis thanks all the people of God who have gathered in these days to pray for his health.”

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A gift any Russian leader could only dream of is in Putin’s grasp – a NATO without US military support

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A gift any Russian leader could only dream of is in Putin's grasp - a NATO without US military support

In a strictly military sense, the war in Ukraine is not going so badly for Kyiv. 

Russian territorial gains on the ground have slowed to a crawl since last November for which they are losing, on average, some 1,500 men every day.

They have almost – but still not quite – taken Toretsk. And after months of being on the verge of overwhelming the other key strategic towns of Chasiv Yar and Pokrovsk, Russian forces still remain outside them.

Russia’s massive air bombing campaign against the Ukrainian power grid, its critical infrastructure and civilian targets has not brought Kyiv to its knees, though this has been far and away the toughest winter of Russia’s air offensive against Ukraine.

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And in the Black Sea, Ukraine has chased the Russian navy away from its western waters and thus kept its vital shipping routes open from the Odesa ports to the Mediterranean and the Danube Basin. This is a strategic battle Ukraine has unquestionably won.

But with so much material help from Iran, North Korea and China, Russia is obviously prepared to carry on the war, even though on current trends, its own economy will be pretty shaky by the end of this year.

If Western powers, particularly the United States, continued with their previous levels of support, then Ukraine could carry on as well, if it were minded to keep fighting, even with its more limited pool of manpower.

But the battlefield doesn’t matter much any more. The political ground has dramatically shifted under Kyiv and its principal backers in Europe.

The US seems to have suddenly reversed its position under President Trump, and it is driving Ukraine into a very rapid, so-called ‘peace deal’. Serious negotiations have not yet begun, but top US decision-makers seem to want to give Moscow more than it could ever have dreamed of when its “special military operation” in Ukraine went so spectacularly wrong three years ago.

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Three years of war in Ukraine

Moscow now feels it has a very good chance of keeping all its military gains, getting even parts of the Ukrainian regions it hasn’t yet conquered, getting some relief from sanctions, US investment in its economy and re-entry into the G7, which would go back to being a G8.

It will also be making demands on what Kyiv will and will not be allowed to do and what NATO should do to “reassure” Moscow that it won’t have to invade anyone else in an act of self-defence.

Most of all, the US is holding out the tantalizing prospect to Russia that NATO’s “transatlantic dimension” may be militarily finished under the Trump administration. That implies that if the Europeans end up fighting Russia in the future, the US will stand aside.

That prospect is the greatest free gift Washington could ever give Moscow.

Stalin, Khrushchev, Brezhnev, even Gorbachev and Yeltsin, fervently wished for it but never even got close. Putin may feel it is now within his grasp, whatever happens next in Ukraine.

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