Nearly 3,000 people have been evacuated in southern France as out-of-control wildfires sweep through the country amid a record-breaking heatwave.
Terrified tourists could be seen running for their lives as an inferno ripped through a campsite in the town of Sainte-Marie-la-Mer, near the Spanish border.
The blaze destroying dozens of mobile homes before spreading to Canet-en-Roussillon with a luxury yacht going up in flames. The airport in nearby Perpignan was closed as two thousand firefighters battled several fires.
It comes as more vicious fights broke out across a number of Lidl stores with shoppers going head-to-head to buy fans and air conditioners before temperatures are expected to reach 37C this weekend in a raging new heatwave.
The World Meteorological Organisation last week warned that the record temperatures that baked Western Europe for over a week in late June would worsen the risk of wildfires, given the outlook for sustained high temperatures, very low humidity and dry vegetation.
French Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu held a crisis meeting in Marseille and revealed that 8,700 hectares had burned in France so far this season, including 1,200 on Wednesday alone.
France, the Netherlands and Belgium have already recorded 3,700 excess deaths from the June heatwave that sent temperatures soaring across Europe, with authorities warning that the numbers are preliminary and could rise.
France’s weather office has warned that another spell of extreme heat could hit next week, prompting a surge of panicked shoppers to descend on stores in the hopes of grabbing air-con units in time.
Have you been affected by the wildfires? Email Imogen.Garfinkel@dailymail.co.uk
Nearly 3,000 people have been evacuated in southern France as out-of-control wildfires sweep through the country amid a record-breaking heatwave
Vicious fights have broken out across a number of French Lidl stores, as shoppers go head-to-head to buy fans and air conditioners before temperatures are expected to reach 37C this weekend
The fire started at a campsite in the town of Sainte-Marie-la-Mer, near the Spanish border, destroying dozens of mobile homes before spreading to Canet-en-Roussillon on Thursday
In Canet-en-Roussillon, four helicopters were deployed to help tackle the blaze and three Canadair firefighting planes were on standby.
‘Our main concern is the industrial zone, where many industrial buildings are located. Some contain potentially polluting substances and flammable materials,’ Pierre Regnault de la Mothe, the top official in the Pyrenees-Orientales department, told reporters.
To the east, the fire in the Aude scorched some 900 hectares as winds reaching 70 kilometres per hour complicated the efforts of nearly 700 firefighters.
Nearly 3,000 people were evacuated, with half of them from three campsites in the affected area.
In the north of Portugal, a forest fire raging for two days has injured four people, as the country battled a third day of intense heat.
A civil protection spokesman told AFP that more than 900 firefighters were battling the blaze that started Wednesday in Vouzela, Viseu district.
Three firefighters and a civilian had suffered burns, the spokesman added.
Hundreds of emergency services were also fighting three other fires in northern Portugal, where temperatures in some districts are predicted to reach 44C.
The government has ordered special measures including barring access to forests and restricting the use of some types of machinery in rural areas.
Carnage erupted in French supermarkets on Thursday after Lidl promised to put out 200,000 fans and air conditioners on its shelves, prompting customers to queue outside stores before dawn in preparation.
But from the moment the stores opened, hundreds flocked inside, with ferocious shoppers resorting to physical violence to secure the electronic devices.
Shocking videos circulating on social media show customers being crushed at the checkout, women yanking each other’s hair, and shoppers tackling rivals to the ground.
Other footage shows hordes of people stampeding through the aisles and speedily grabbing boxes, leaving the remaining shelves empty.
Shocking videos circulating on social media show customers being crushed at the checkout, women yanking each other’s hair, and shoppers tackling rivals to the ground
Carnage erupted in French supermarkets on Thursday after Lidl promised to put out 200,000 fans and air conditioners on its shelves, prompting customers to queue outside stores before dawn in preparation
But from the moment the stores opened, hundreds flocked inside, with ferocious shoppers resorting to physical violence to secure the electronic devices
Despite the promise of plentiful devices, customers experienced a shortage of stock
At least 30,000 fans and air-con units were sold at Carrefour on June 22, according to CEO Alexandre Bompard, which is 1,000 times more than an average day
Local journalists said the police were forced to intervene as customers began brawling, doing anything in their power to secure the machines.
In the suburb of Nanterre, Hauts-de-Seine, more than a hundred people descended on a Lidl store, damaging the entrance door in the process.
According to information from BFMTV, only about ten shoppers ultimately managed to leave the scene successfully with a device, due to the outbreak of arguments.
Despite the promise of plentiful devices, customers experienced a shortage of stock.
In Saint-Germain-en-Laye in Yvelines, the shelves were apparently emptied in minutes, and there were no air conditioners, with only about 50 fans available for customers.
Tension started early at 7.30am, by which time a long line had already emerged outside the shop.
Later, people physically fought one another for the last remaining boxes, prompting law enforcement to intervene amid the chaotic stampede.
Those who arrived after 8.30am likely went home empty-handed, after queuing for hours.
‘It’s ridiculous, people have gone completely mad,’ Haissam, a resident of Carrières-sous-Poissy, told Le Parisien.
Walker, a taxi driver and resident of Éragny in Val-d’Oise, pointed a finger at the store: ‘Lidl knew perfectly well it would be chaos and they didn’t organise anything.’
A similar scene of carnage unfolded in Orgeval, also in the Yvelines department.
In Essonne, the shop in Saint-Germain-lès-Corbeil was stormed by customers, and nearly 200 vehicles blocked the surrounding area, particularly on the Francilienne highway.
The police were called to help restore control amid the mayhem.
In Paris too, shoppers complained about being unable to purchase the fans and air-con units.
‘I just came back from Lidl. One store in Paris received only one air conditioner, while another received nothing. At this rate, I estimate that the supply for the whole of Paris will probably not exceed one hundred units,’ wrote one disappointed person on X.
In the 14th arrondissement, ‘there were two air conditioners and more than 400 people. They used tear gas. Women fell,’ another customer claimed.
‘Nothing at Grèves in Colombes,’ one social media user wrote after failing to purchase a device.
‘Frankly, it looks like a scam,’ another concluded.
Smoke is seen as huge fire and flames engulfed yachts and campsites, with campers evacuated from the seaside resort of Canet-en-Roussillon
Flames from a wildfire burn through vegetation near Sainte-Valiere, Aude department, southern France, on July 2
Fireguard aircraft of the civil security drops retardant over a wildfire in Pouzols-Minervois, southwestern of France
A wildfire rages near houses in Pouzols-Minervois, southwestern of France, on July 2
At one store in Rueil-Malmaison, ‘only one air conditioner’ was ‘grabbed’ by a woman ‘who had been there since 5am,’ said one despairing shopper.
‘All that for this,’ she wrote on X.
Others were critical of the way the crowds behaved, with one social media user comparing the public to ‘savages’.
Some emerged victorious from the chaotic scenes, however, with one proud shopper sharing a photograph of their purchase and writing: ‘I’ve won the holy battle of Lidl. A source of pride I’ll add to my CV.’
At least 30,000 fans and air-con units were sold at Carrefour on June 22, according to CEO Alexandre Bompard, which is 1,000 times more than an average day.
In its first preliminary estimate, the national public health agency in France said deaths surged during the heatwave’s peak last week, which roasted most of the country with temperatures that soared in many places above 40C and also broke records for nighttime highs – an exhausting one-two punch for fatigued bodies.
Public Health France said there were more than 1,200 deaths last Wednesday, when France registered its hottest ever day, breaking a record that had been set just the previous day.
Deaths then increased to more than 1,400 on Thursday and another 1,400 on Friday, it said.
By way of comparison, the pre-heatwave death rate in April and May was around 900 to 1,000 per day, it said.
The agency cautioned that its estimate of at least 1,000 additional deaths during those three sizzling days alone is expected to increase as more death certificates come in for people who died at home and in care facilities for older people, where most deaths are still not registered electronically.
‘Mortality will as a consequence be higher than these first figures,’ the agency said.
Scientists have said the heatwave, which began on June 20, was the worst recorded in Europe, and the blistering conditions have disrupted power generation, damaged infrastructure and overwhelmed healthcare systems.
‘Right now 150million people are living under extreme heat, hundreds have died, schools are shut, grids are buckling,’ World Health Organisation Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on X.
‘Driven by climate change and global warming, the phenomenon of the “once-in-a-generation” heatwave is now occurring nearly annually. We were warned,’ he wrote, adding that Europe’s homes, workplaces and schools were ill-equipped for extreme heat.
A firefighter operates near a French firefighters’ wildland fire engines ‘CCFM’ (Camion Citerne Forestier Moyen) as a fire hits in Pouzols-Minervois, southwestern France on July 2
This photo provided by the French fire brigade SDIS13 on Thursday July, 2, 2026, shows the wildfire near La Fare, southern France
The World Meteorological Organisation last week warned that the record temperatures that baked Western Europe for over a week in late June would worsen the risk of wildfires
French Green party lawmakers announced plans to file a no-confidence motion against the government over its handling of the severe heatwave, as the country braces for a third possible bout of extreme temperatures next week.
It was not immediately clear if the motion would be put forward this week or early next week.
When asked about the motion, government spokesman Maud Bregeon said on Wednesday: ‘Obviously, it’s going to be filed. It is a political manoeuvre.’
‘There is a government managing the crisis and there are political forces fueling the crisis by introducing the motion,’ Bregeon told reporters after a meeting of the French Cabinet.
The bid to topple Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu’s minority government is unlikely to succeed without the backing of other opposition parties, including the hard-Right National Rally or the Socialists.
The Socialists have not supported any of the no-confidence motions filed against Lecornu since he took office last year.
Cyrielle Chatelain, who leads the Greens in the National Assembly, said on Tuesday the motion would be filed to protest the government’s ‘lack of preparedness not only for the heatwave we have just experienced, but especially for the one that is coming’.


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