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Middle East crisis live: Funeral procession for supreme leader Ali Khamenei begins in Iran

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday urged the United States not to sell its F-35 fighter jets or components to Turkey, arguing it would “upset the power balance” in the region. US president Donald Trump travels later on Monday to Ankara for a Nato summit, and his visit could be seen by the Turks as an opportunity to secure acquisition of dozens of jet engines and potential readmission to the F-35 fighter jet program, AFP reports. The Israeli prime minister however warned that it would be a mistake for Washington to reward Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan, whom Netanyahu said “calls openly for the annihilation of Israel,” with advanced military technology. “I don’t think they should be given F-35s or the engines for their fighter jets, because that’ll upset the power balance in the Middle East, which is ultimately guaranteed by Israeli air superiority and also by, I think, by America’s posture in the Middle East,” Netanyahu told Fox News morning show Fox + Friends.

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Zelenskyy calls for ‘strong decisions’ at Nato summit as Russia kills 21 in overnight strikes on Kyiv – Europe live

Meanwhile, the death toll frim the Kyiv attacks last night has risen to 21 – 15 in the capital, and six in the surrounding regions, agencies reported.

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UK charity funding school at heart of illegal Israeli settlement expansion

A British charity is funding a religious school at the heart of expansion plans for the illegal Israeli settlement in the Palestinian city of Hebron. Friends of Yeshivat Shavei Hevron sent nearly £200,000 to the school between 2019 and 2024, the last year for which accounts are publicly available on the website of the Charity Commission, the charity regulator for England and Wales. Construction of a new dormitory for the school was approved in June, after the far-right finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich, unilaterally broke a decades-old international agreement on control of Hebron to give Israel planning authority. The expansion will increase the population of one of the most extreme Israeli communities in the occupied West Bank, and the only one built in the heart of a Palestinian city. “We want British charities to fund peace, not to fund obstacles for peace. This is very wrong,” said Issa Amro, a Palestinian human rights defender from Hebron and co-founder of Youth Against Settlements. “The students at this yeshiva are very aggressive. A new building will mean more violence towards Palestinians, more restrictions, more Israeli military presence.” Israel has built extensive systems of militarised separation to isolate several hundred settlers inside Hebron from the city they moved into. Palestinians are barred entirely from some streets, and walls and gates divide Palestinians who live in areas under Israeli military control from most of the 230,000 population. “For this yeshiva to exist, thousands of Palestinians have already lost their shops, their housing and their daily livelihood in the heart of a Palestinian city,” said Hagit Ofran, from the Israeli advocacy group Peace Now. “The new dormitory is a significant development because they are adding more settlers in Hebron, the most extreme settlement, where apartheid is everywhere.” International and Israeli leaders, including the late US president Jimmy Carter, the former Mossad head Tamir Pardo and former attorney general of Israel Michael Ben-Yair, have said Israel has imposed apartheid in the occupied West Bank, including Hebron. Hebron Yeshiva seeks funding in other countries that consider settlements in occupied Palestine illegal, offering donations “with receipts” in France and Canada. An Israeli crowd-funding tech company, IsraelGives, has also facilitated millions of dollars in funding for settlements from US residents. The exterior of the new dormitory is already complete and the Israeli military has built an outpost on the roof of the Palestinian home next door. In 2023, Friends of Yeshivat Shavei Hevron donated £58,200 to the school and claimed more than £2,000 in gift aid from HMRC, according to its accounts. The charity says on its website that it is not registered for gift aid. In 2024, when it had lower turnover so did not file full accounts, it sent £21,360 to the school. The donations from Friends of Yeshivat appear to contravene the charity’s own deed of trust, which refers to educational and charitable work “in the state of Israel”, with no mention of Palestine. Although Israel has never defined its own borders, the British government last year formally recognised the state of Palestine, on territory which includes Hebron. The charity was one of 32 registered in England and Wales identified in a letter sent to the commission by the Labour MP Melanie Ward on 1 June in which she said they had in total donated at least £28m to Israeli settlements in recent years. The Guardian understands that the Charity Commission passed on details of the letter to the Metropolitan police’s war crimes unit but no investigation is under way. On 9 June, the foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper, said in parliament that “charity systems are abused to funnel support to illegal settlements” and that “some evidence suggests that rules are being broken”. She said the Charity Commission had been tasked with investigating links to settlements. The commission said in a statement that it shared Ward’s concerns. It added: “But this remains a complex and contentious issue, which touches on wider legal principles about charities’ right to operate, and support the most vulnerable, in parts of the world in which there may be conflict, contested jurisdiction, or lawlessness.” Friends of Yeshivat Shavei Hevron provides details of a UK account with Barclays Bank to which donors can transfer funds. A Barclays spokesperson said it could not comment on individual clients but that it “does have policies and procedures in place to meet its legal and regulatory obligations – including appropriate due diligence and financial crime controls for charity clients”. The charity’s contact email was the professional account of Ari Bloom, a trustee who is a partner at the law firm Solomon Taylor & Shaw. Solomon Taylor & Shaw’s switchboard number is listed as the charity’s phone contact, and it is registered to the same north London address used by the law firm. The contact details on the Charity Commission website were changed after the Guardian contacted Solomon Taylor & Shaw and Bloom for comment. Friends of Yeshivat Shavei Hevron was also approached for comment. The current yeshiva building and the expansion are both at the edge of the Israeli-controlled area of Hebron. Nadav Weiman, the executive director of Breaking the Silence, a group founded by Israeli combat veterans to document military abuses in occupied Palestine, said students throw stones at Palestinians from their roof. Israeli soldiers, who outnumber the settlers, have turned the rooftops of private Palestinian homes into military posts to guard the yeshiva complex. “If communities fund that [new] dormitory, they are funding more violence, funding the next wave that will bring death to Palestinian families and Israeli families,” Weiman said. “Everything that happens in Hebron first, happens elsewhere afterwards.”

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Detained Gaza doctor almost unrecognisable after injuries in Israeli jail, lawyer says

One of Gaza’s most prominent doctors is almost unrecognisable because of severe injuries inflicted in Israeli detention, his lawyer has said, and faces “tangible danger to his life” after being held for 18 months without charge or trial. Hussam Abu Safiya met his lawyer on 2 July, after a transfer to Israel’s notorious underground Rakefet prison in late June. He had difficulty breathing and speaking continuously, was so weak he struggled to sit upright, and repeatedly seemed on the verge of losing consciousness, said his lawyer, Nasser Odeh. Abu Safiya, who was the director of the Kamal Adwan hospital in northern Gaza until he was seized by Israeli forces, said he feared for his life. “They brought me here to kill me. I don’t see myself surviving. This is the end,” Odeh quoted him as saying, in a joint statement with Physicians for Human Rights Israel (PHRI), who along with other organisations are calling for his release. His detention is part of a broader pattern of Israeli attacks on healthcare across occupied Palestine, said Milena Ansari, PHRI’s director for the area. On Sunday a four-month-old Palestinian baby, Ahmad Maarouf Zaid, died after Israeli forces blocked his family from crossing a checkpoint to reach a waiting ambulance, his family told the Guardian. They drove the severely ill baby on unpaved and mountainous back roads to Ramallah themselves, which delayed treatment by over an hour. “The reports of a newborn dying after delays at a West Bank checkpoint, the arrest of a physician providing medical care, and the deepening humanitarian crisis in Gaza should not be understood as isolated incidents,” Ansari said. “They reflect a broader pattern in which the conditions necessary to realise Palestinians’ right to health are being systematically undermined.” Abu Safiya had become the face of health workers struggling to treat patients throughout the war in Gaza before his detention. He is being held indefinitely, along with thousands of other Palestinian civilians, in prisons that Israeli rights groups say have become torture camps. In late May he was transferred from Ketziot prison to the Ganot prison complex and put in solitary confinement without explanation, Odeh said. Abu Safiya described an attack there by guards using hammers and batons, shortly after appearing via video link at a supreme court appeal hearing challenging his detention. He was then moved to the Rakefet facility on 24 June, where Odeh noted a severe and dangerous deterioration in his condition. “I have visited Dr Abu Safiya several times since his detention, but the individual I encountered during this latest visit was not the same person I had previously met,” Odeh said on Sunday, calling for an immediate independent medical examination. ‘‘His physical and psychological state, the severe injuries visible on his body, and his personal testimony leave no room for doubt: his life is in immediate danger.” Abu Safiya appeared frightened, distressed and reluctant to speak freely in the meeting, Odeh said, but told his lawyer that he was subjected to daily beatings in the Rakefet jail, and had lost consciousness several times as a result. Rakefet, where prisoners never see daylight, was built in the 1980s to hold senior organised crime figures before being closed on the grounds it was inhumane. It was reopened on the orders of the far-right national security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir. Other Palestinians detained there reported feeling breathless and choking in the unventilated, overcrowded cells, even without injuries like those sustained by Abu Safiya. An Israel prison service spokesperson said allegations made by Odeh were “false and entirely without factual basis”, but declined to comment on Abu Safiya’s health, citing privacy concerns. The death of four-month-old Ahmad, from Deir Ammar refugee camp, was announced on Sunday evening. A longed-for baby, he was born after years of IVF treatment to a family and was healthy most of his short life. The family called emergency services when he developed a high fever on Sunday morning and medics sent an ambulance to the camp’s Ein Ayoub gate. Since 7 October 2023 Israel has regularly barred vehicles including ambulances from driving through Ein Ayoub, which is the main route to Ramallah and its hospitals. Residents can usually cross on foot but as Ahmad’s parents approached they were stopped by four Israeli soldiers, who had fired teargas at people in the area and ignored the family’s desperate pleas. A video of the incident was shared on X. “This baby needed oxygen. If he had been allowed to reach an ambulance and get to the hospital, his life could have been saved,” said Arafat Ahmad Zaid, the boy’s uncle. A spokesperson for the Israeli military denied blocking the family from crossing to seek medical aid. Zaid said the circumstances of his nephew’s death compounded the family’s grief. “There are no words to describe the pain of watching your own child die in your arms while knowing there is nothing you can do to save him. That is the ultimate suffering. That is the ultimate humiliation.”

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Moles of Venezuela: the amateur rescuers digging and delving through the post-quake rubble

As the sun rose above Venezuela’s shattered northern coast, a motorbike mechanic nicknamed Culebrita (Little Snake) lowered himself into a chaotic mesh of concrete and steel and began crawling towards his objective. “I’m not afraid – but you need to be brave to do this,” said Darwin Rodríguez, a slender 32-year-old who earned the serpentine moniker because of his ability to slither in and out of minuscule spaces. Rodríguez and his comrades were trying to reach the first floor of Residencia Costa Brava, a collapsed 14-storey apartment building that was flattened when the region was hit by a brace of powerful earthquakes on 24 June. More than a week later, 3,342 people have been confirmed dead but volunteer searchers such as Rodríguez hope survivors can still be found. “This isn’t about money. It’s about saving lives,” said Esnaider Meléndez, 35, another unpaid rescuer who was trying to penetrate the obliterated building having left his wife and four young children at home in the capital, Caracas, to join the search. Rodríguez and Meléndez are known as topos (moles) – amateur Venezuelan rescue workers who have spent recent days burrowing deep into crevices and crannies to locate the thousands of people feared to have been trapped when their homes came crashing down. The term topo was coined 40 years ago in Mexico after a 8.1-magnitude earthquake devastated that country’s capital in 1985, killing more than 20,000 people. The disaster spawned a now famous civilian search and rescue (SAR) team popularly known as the Mexican Moles which went on to become a highly trained group that pioneered SAR techniques and played a key role after major catastrophes including 9/11, the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, and Haiti’s 2010 earthquake. Now, after last week’s calamity, Venezuela has its own company of moles who, day and night, are digging and delving in the hope of saving lives – or at least offering closure to the relatives of those missing. Adolfo Guedes, whose daughter lies somewhere under Costa Brava’s rubble, wept as he spoke of his gratitude to the intrepid moles battling to find her. “I want you to tell this story so the world knows what we Venezuelans are made of, brother,” he said as the group donned protective gloves and masks and prepared to infiltrate the wreckage of his child’s home. The moles had travelled six hours from Poblado Uno, a village in Venezuela’s agricultural heartlands, by truck and motorbike to reach the disaster zone in Caraballeda, a beach town in La Guaira, the worst-hit region. “They are tirelessly helping. They go inside without any kind of fear,” Guedes said. Before the earthquakes, these men were mostly small-scale cattle ranchers or cassava and banana growers. “Now, they are moles. They’ve gone from being farmers to being moles because of the love they feel for my daughter,” added Guedes. “We are a united people, so very united. Poor, humble, uneducated and rough-hewn – but united. And that is so valuable,” he said of his farmer friends. His wife, Yaritza, sat nearby with a drip in her arm because she can no longer bear to eat. As Little Snake crept through a tangle of steel rods and slabs, his peers used buckets and spades to clear shards from the top of the pile of wreckage, which they believed was the building’s sixth floor. The other eight floors had pitched forwards towards the swimming pool at the beachfront condo’s entrance. The wife of a man who lived on the fifth floor, Eduardo Rosal, joined efforts to clear the debris so they could tunnel deeper inside and, hopefully, find her husband a few metres below. “I think there’s a chance [he’s still alive] because there is a pretty big column here [that could be protecting him],” said Luzmar Olivares who had popped out three hours before the first quake. Olivares crouched down and began removing brick and tile fragments with her bare hands. The ruins around her were sprinkled with her neighbours’ belongings: pots of rosemary, thyme and cloves, remote controls, Christmas tree baubles, and a collection of rock LPs. A few kilometres east, past dozens of annihilated homes and businesses, another team of moles had dug a 15-metre tunnel into Residencia Perlamar, a 10-storey construction that had keeled over into the road, trapping two brothers, Jesús and Moisés, 15 and 20. One digger lay flat on his back and slid into a tiny crack between two of the building’s reinforced concrete slabs – once the ceiling and floor of an apartment, now only a few inches apart. A portrait of the Last Supper hung from the wall above him. “We don’t have any training,” said Kevin Pérez, 21, a cousin of the siblings inside. “But we are keen to help.” A mole’s work is dirty and dangerous – and not just because of the constant risk of being crushed by one of these unstable structures. Last week, a searcher known as El Topo de La Guaira (The Mole of La Guaira) reportedly vanished into custody after criticising the government’s sluggish response to the disaster in a viral social media video. He was released after a public outcry. Around the corner from Perlamar, a government housing project called OPPE 26 – a cluster of 12-storey towers built on the orders of the former president Hugo Chávez – had been almost completely razed, reduced to a mangle of crushed concrete and household appliances. Only two of the complex’s towers were still standing, with one so badly damaged it appeared close to collapse. A basketball backboard protruded from the debris but the court had been swallowed up by a sea of bricks. At the heart of the chaos, dozens of dust-caked moles could be seen wriggling in and out of holes they had hammered out of concrete slabs, or climbing into fissures in the pancaked structure to access tunnels they were busy carving out of the remains of the towers. The bustling landscape was reminiscent of a scene from one of Sebastião Salgado’s iconic photographs of Brazil’s Serra Pelada mining pits, with volunteers scrambling over huge mounds of rubble with torches, helmets and hand tools. Others took a pause from their back-breaking task, smoking cigarettes or collapsing on the sofas and mattresses of residents who were almost certainly dead. “My family’s in there – two uncles and a six-year-old cousin,” said Yason Torres, 21, as he sat in the dirt. “We need help, but the Venezuelan authorities aren’t doing anything.” As the moles toiled in the Caribbean humidity, family members hoisted themselves on to the dustheap to ask if their loved ones had been found. “We’re at our wit’s end. I just want God to give me a sign,” said one man who believed his 29-year-old daughter and four grandchildren were buried there. Another man, Neimi Jáuregui, 54, was searching for his sister and her four children, aged 17, 16, 12 and 10. “My heart is in pieces,” Jáuregui said. By his feet, trapped between two slabs, were several decomposing bodies that local people had doused in quicklime to mask the stench. The arms of one victim were frozen above their head, like a Pompeii victim, as if they had instinctively tried to protect themselves in the seconds before the building came down. Around the corner, two black body bags lay near the project’s entrance containing the bodies of an 11-year-old girl called Sofía and her 16-year-old brother, Samuel. Minutes earlier, they had been found in their living room with their 36-year-old mother, a preschool teacher called Gabriela Carolina Arangure Suárez, and their 60-year-old grandmother, Lucía. “We were the ones who found our dead. We received no help from the state at all,” said the grandfather, Víctor Arangure, who dug his four relatives out himself with his hands. More than a week after the earthquakes, the moles clawing their way through Residencia Costa Brava’s skeleton were also finding bodies, including a three-year-old child, as hopes for survivors began to fade and professional search efforts wound down. “[I found] a corpse – a man. But you can’t get to him because he’s trapped between two slabs,” Little Snake told his team after emerging from the burrow he had used to access the first floor. There was still no sign of Guedes’s daughter but he hoped for news before nightfall. The group’s leader, Silvio Sivira, praised the international search and rescue crews who have flocked to La Guaira with search dogs and a wealth of sophisticated technology. But he believed volunteer moles – many of whom are friends and relatives of the missing – could also do their bit with their hammers and their hearts. “They are a bit more objective than us,” he said of those highly skilled foreign responders. “[But] we are moved by feelings and by something that runs through our veins.”

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Turkey intensifies crackdown on public life in run-up to Nato summit in Ankara

Authorities in Turkey have widened a crackdown on public life, arresting more than 200 people during raids across Ankara last month, jailing a comedian and blocking a cruise ship carrying LGBTQ+ passengers from docking in the run-up to the Nato summit in the capital. The arrests followed a ban on demonstrations in Ankara that was put in place until 10 July. Human Rights Watch (HRW) said this was evidence of Turkey’s “ruthless intolerance of freedom of speech and assembly”. The watchdog group said the Nato summit, which starts on Tuesday, was taking place in the context of intensifying violations of basic rights, “including far-reaching restrictions on the main political opposition party, the media, and freedom of expression in general”. Last week, the standup comedian Deniz Göktaş was arrested and put in pre-trial detention after arriving at Istanbul airport from a holiday. Göktaş was charged with “insulting the president” and “denigrating religious values” in relation to a show in which he referred to the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, as a dictator and made jokes about suicide bombers. The performance took place in Istanbul on 1 June and a recording was released on YouTube on 24 June. The video has been viewed nearly 9m times. According to the Turkish news outlet Bianet, Göktaş attempted to explain his jokes in his testimony to prosecutors, telling them: “The word ‘dictator’ is a political term, a topic frequently discussed in public, and I have no intention of insulting or belittling anyone with this statement.” In another recent incident, authorities in the coastal town of Aydın blocked a cruise ship operated by Atlantis, a company specialising in gay-friendly holidays, from docking on the grounds that people on board were “known for behaviours” that did “not align with the structure of our society and our moral values”. The US actor and singer Patti LuPone, who was scheduled to perform on the cruise, wrote in a social media post: “The Atlantis cruise I am performing on next week has been banned from entering Turkey … simply because of who is onboard.” This year, Reporters Without Borders accused Turkey of using “all possible means… to undermine critics” as the country fell to 163rd place out of 180 countries on the NGO’s press freedom index. Right groups and opposition parties have long accused the Turkish authorities of muzzling free speech in the country, where prosecutions for criticising Erdoğan have risen sharply in recent years. On Sunday, two journalists were arrested: Buse Söğütlü, the international news editor at online newspaper T24; and Ceren Erdoğdu, a journalist at OdaTV. Söğütlü’s lawyer Erman Öztürk told Agence France-Presse: “We believe it is linked to the Nato summit.” Ezgi Onalan, the head of the Istanbul branch of the Association of Contemporary Lawyers, was also detained, the rights group announced on X. Ankara’s prosecutor’s office said the arrests in late June, which took place during dawn raids, would “decipher the action and activities of terrorist organisations”, and accused those held of links to a number of of socialist and Marxist groups as well as the Islamic State. HRW said authorities had provided no evidence of any crimes committed by people accused of terrorism. Among those detained on suspicion of membership of terrorist groups were the journalist and LGBTQ+ activist Yıldız Tar, two lawyers, an academic and 14 members of an environmental organisation focused on reforestation. Western leaders have mostly avoided publicly raising concerns about Turkey’s record on rights and freedoms, instead focusing on increasing security ties with the regional military ⁠power and big arms exporter. Some critics of the Erdoğan government believe the relative western silence encourages its authoritarian slide, isolates Turkey’s opposition and ignores Nato’s founding principles of democracy and rule of law. “It remains important for the west to continue to comment on the degradation of democratic institutions in ‌Turkey because the course is not irrevocably set, Turkey is ‌not beyond the pale,” David Satterfield, a former US ambassador to Ankara, told Reuters last week. “It’s important that Turks hear others talking about their system in this way,” said Satterfield, who is now director of the Baker Institute for Public Policy, a thinktank housed at Rice University in Houston, Texas. In the past year, Turkey’s primary opposition Republican People’s party (CHP) has been subjected to a sustained crackdown. Istanbul’s mayor, Ekrem İmamoğlu, has been arrested and put on trial, as have hundreds of other municipal opposition politicians. In late May, a court unseated the leader of the CHP in a move that critics feared was intended to stifle the party’s ability to challenge Erdoğan. İmamoğlu is standing trial on an array of graft charges. The CHP says he is its chosen candidate for president, even if that means he runs for office from prison. The 56-year-old was ejected from the courtroom during a hearing last week after clashing with the judge, who said he would enforce a 9 July deadline to hear statements from the defence.

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Wildfires rage across southern Europe, forcing thousands to flee homes

Wildfires raging across southern Europe have forced thousands to flee their homes and prompted officials to ban spectators from a stage of the Tour de France, amid warnings of “powder keg” conditions after a record-breaking early summer heatwave. Hundreds of firefighters are tackling blazes that have burned through almost 20,000 hectares (49,500 acres) in Portugal, Spain, France and Greece. Strong winds are forecast to fan the flames and temperatures are expected to rise again this week. In the remote foothills of the French Pyrenees near the Spanish border, 700 firefighters were struggling to contain an out-of-control wildfire that has ⁠scorched 5,000 hectares and prompted the evacuation of more than 10,000 people. “This morning, conditions are ⁠deteriorating again,” said the French interior minister, Laurent Nuñez, on Monday, adding that with wildfires now blazing in five departments, twice as much land had burned in France so far this season compared with the same time last year. The EU said on Monday it was sending ⁠four waterbombing aircraft to France from Cyprus and Sweden to help firefighters around the city of Perpignan. “Europe stands with France,” the European Commission president, Ursula ⁠von der Leyen, posted. The Pyrenees fire has nearly tripled in size since Sunday. “It came within 300 metres [984ft] of the houses. We were shocked by how fast it spread, it was staggering – bordering on panic,” Patrice, from the village of Trévillach, told Agence France-Presse. The blazes follow a premature May heatwave and another in June that shattered temperature records across western Europe, caused thousands of excess deaths and left vast areas of land particularly vulnerable to wildfires. Chantal Mauchet, the prefect of the Hérault department, where several fires have burned through at least 300 hectares of land, said on Monday southern France’s wildfire season had “essentially started three or more weeks early”. The World Weather Attribution group of scientists has said the extreme temperatures recorded in June would have been “virtually impossible” without the climate crisis. Temperatures are forecast to climb again this week, rising to 40C locally. “Climate change is here, we are living the consequences and it is only the start of July,” said the fire chief for Pyrénées-Orientales, Eric Belgioino. “This season is going to be a long one for the soldiers fighting fires. You have to help us.” The eastern Pyrenees prefect, Pierre Regnault de la Mothe, ordered Tour de France spectators “not to go near the route or to the finish area” of Monday’s third stage of the cycling race through the Pyrenees from Spain into France. He said it would be “limited to the passage of the riders only and vehicles essential to the race”. On the Spanish side of the border, fire has ravaged 2,200 hectares, 97% of which has been in the protected natural area of Les Gavarres. The head of operations of the Catalan fire service, Eduard Martinez, said the blaze had a perimeter of 40km (25 miles). Firefighters said their efforts would be complicated by rising temperatures and the many “smoking hotspots” within the perimeter, but announced late on Sunday that the blaze was stable and they hoped it would be extinguished ⁠during the week. South of Catalonia, in Spain’s eastern Castellón province, more than 500 people were evacuated after a wildfire spread into the Sierra de Espadán national park. In central Portugal’s Vouzela area, more than 1,200 firefighters supported by nearly 400 vehicles and 15 aircraft were trying to extinguish a blaze that broke out on Thursday and had burned across an area of 13,000 hectares by Sunday. Spain and Italy sent firefighters and aircraft to help and emergency services said on Monday that while dangerous spots remained, 80% of the blaze was under control. Portugal’s interior minister, Luís Neves, described conditions as a “powder keg”. Elsewhere, large fires also destroyed hundreds of hectares of forest, vineyards and scrub on the Croatian island of Hvar and at Tale in Albania, while in Greece, which was largely spared last month’s heatwave, flames set off by a forest fire tore through two factories in the northern city of Thessaloniki. Greek authorities issued evacuation alerts for three suburbs and urged residents in parts of the city to stay indoors and shut their windows and doors because of toxic smoke from one of the factories, a recycling plant. Another large wildfire broke out Sunday afternoon west of Athens, with 210 firefighters, supported by volunteers, specialised teams and 29 aircraft deployed to tackle the blaze burning through pine forest in the Mandra area.