Winds fuel fears of new Croatia wildfires

Winds fuel fears of new Croatia wildfires
Firefighters attempt to extinguish the wildfire in Pisak, Croatia. (Handout/Reuters)
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Updated 22 June 2025

Winds fuel fears of new Croatia wildfires

Winds fuel fears of new Croatia wildfires

ZAGREB: Firefighters in southern Croatia were on high alert Sunday in fear that expected strong winds could rekindle blazes in the Balkan nation.
Crews, with the help of water bombers, managed to get control Saturday over wildfires on the southern Adriatic coast, after a series of blazes started in recent days.
The fires, near Croatia’s second largest city Split, that started Saturday morning close to the coastal village of Pisak was put under control but were still smoldering.
They have burnt 300 hectares (740 acres) and dozen of houses, authorities said.
According to the Split-Dalmatia county firefighting commander, Ivan Kovacevic during the night several small fires were put down by the firefighters.
“The damage is huge, but it could have been bigger having given the number of structures that were threatened,” Kovacevic said.
No death have been report, while one firefighter and some civilians have suffered minor injuries.
According to Civil protection headquarters at least 94 people, mostly tourists were evacuated in Omis, but late Saturday they returned to their accommodation.
Deputy prefect of Split-Dalmatia county, Stipe Cogelja said the village of Marusic on the Adriatic coast suffered the most damages, adding it was “pure luck” that no one had died.
Police said they are “intensively investigating” the possibility of arson in the fires and called on the citizens to help by immediately reporting any suspicious behavior.


French bishop who had a 7-year affair with woman resigns at pope’s urging

French bishop who had a 7-year affair with woman resigns at pope’s urging
Updated 14 sec ago

French bishop who had a 7-year affair with woman resigns at pope’s urging

French bishop who had a 7-year affair with woman resigns at pope’s urging
  • Jean-Paul Gusching cites health issues lay in annoucing his resignation
  • Admits his relationship was consensual, and that “she was a woman of age”

STRASBOURG, France: Pope Leo XIV pressured a French bishop to step down over his “relationships with women,” according to the Vatican, with the defrocked clergyman hitting Wednesday back at the “disgusting” situation.
When announcing his resignation as the Bishop of Verdun in late September, Jean-Paul Gusching had hinted that health issues lay behind the decision to hang up his crosier.
But the Holy See’s embassy to France on Tuesday revealed that those were but “one element” behind that decision, with a preliminary canonical investigation into his behavior underway and the civil courts alerted to the matter.
In an unusual intervention from the Apostolic Nunciature in Paris, the embassy said that after it had alerted the pontiff to the matter, Gusching committed “to avoid in future any behavior toward women that could be interpreted as contrary to his holy vows.”
But “given the ongoing nature of the situation, the Holy Father solicited and accepted his resignation... which took effect on September 27,” the Nunciature added.
A day after the embassy’s statement came to light, Gusching admitted to having a relationship which lasted “from around 2015 to 2022.”
But the ex-bishop said that was “the only affair” he had committed, insisting that the “disgusting” push for his resignation was motivated by “jealousies.”
“They want my head,” the ex-bishop told the local Journal de L’Est republicain paper in an interview published on Wednesday evening.
Asked whether the relationship was consensual, Gusching said: “Yes, she was a woman of age.”
The Vatican has ordered Gusching to “refrain from any liturgical celebrations and public pastoral activities.”
Catholic bishops are strictly forbidden from having any sexual relationships, though the Church has been rocked in recent decades by a litany of child sex abuse scandals.