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Huge wildfire spreads southwest of Berlin

August 24, 2018 01:19 pm | Updated 01:19 pm IST - BERLIN:

Police said that their plans to extinguish the flames have been complicated by old ammunition from World War II, that was still buried in the forests and which could explode due to the fires.

Firefighters battle a wildfire near the village Klausdorf, about 85 km south of Berlin on Friday.

Three villages southwest of Berlin have been evacuated as a wildfire the size of 400 soccer fields spread on Friday.

More than 500 people had to leave their homes as a result of the fire in Treuenbrietzen, some 50 km outside of Berlin.

“Our main goal is to protect the evacuated villages from the flames,” local lawmaker Christian Stein told the German news agency dpa.

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“We haven’t been able to push back the fire, but none of the buildings have been damaged.”

Police said that their plans to extinguish the flames have been complicated by old ammunition from World War II, that was still buried in the forests and which could explode due to the fires.

Mr. Stein said there had already been several detonations and that firefighters were not allowed to enter suspicious areas. Instead, the authorities were trying to douse the flames in those areas with firefighting helicopters from the air.

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The fire started on Thursday afternoon and spread quickly through the dry pine forests. By the evening, the authorities had evacuated the villages of Frohnsdorf, Klausdorf and Tiefenbrunnen.

“Something like that, we didn’t even experience during the war,” 76-year-old Anita Biedermann told dpa as police told her to grab her jacket, ID and important medication from her home before taking her to a nearby gym for the night.

Overnight, winds blew the smoke to Berlin, where people in some neighborhoods were asked to keep their windows closed. Berlin emergency services received calls from concerned Berliners.

Germany has seen a long, hot summer with almost no rain and large parts of the country are on high alert regarding possible wildfires. Raimund Engel, who is in charge of forests in the state of Brandeburg where Treuenbrietzen is located, said 400 wildfires have already been reported this year.

“I hope the weather will play along and the winds won’t increase again,” Mr. Stein said. “We are yearning for rain.”

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