Firefighters battle Fontainebleau forest fire near Paris as two arrested


A firefighter sprays water to extinguish flames in the Fontainebleau forest during a wildfire, in Le Vaudoue, during a heatwave affecting large parts of France, July 13, 2026. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe

PARIS, July 14 (Reuters) - Firefighters battled ⁠through the night to tackle a blaze that tore through ⁠a historic forest near Paris on Tuesday, with at least two ‌people arrested on suspicion of having started the fire near one of France's best-known royal palaces.

"It is not under control," Interior Minister Laurent Nunez said late on Monday, adding that ​the main blaze in Fontainebleau and another ⁠one nearby that started on Monday ⁠afternoon had scorched 1,300 hectares (3,212 acres).

Nunez said the fire was just a ⁠few ‌kilometres away from the Palace of Fontainebleau, which explained the deployment of considerable resources, including water-carrying planes and helicopters.

For the first ⁠time, Canadair aircraft on Monday skimmed the River Seine ​to fill their tanks, ‌attempting to contain a blaze that turned the sky black.

Just 70 ⁠km (40 miles) ​from Paris, the fire forced the closure of the A6 highway linking the capital with Lyon and the south. Smaller fires in the area also disrupted high-speed ⁠train services.

As many as 900 people were evacuated ​from their homes.

Nunez said the Fontainebleau blaze is contributing to what will likely be a historic year for fires in France, with 32,000 hectares burned ⁠already this year, more than the total in 2025.

"We'll probably have a record year," he said. "We expected this with this major drought."

Europe is enduring its third heatwave of the summer, with tinder-dry vegetation and high temperatures fuelling ​blazes from the Iberian Peninsula to France. Many ⁠scientists say climate change is making wildfires more frequent and difficult to combat.

Nunez ​said 59 people have been arrested across France ‌on suspicion of starting fires across the ​country. Around half were adults and half minors, with some repeat offenders, he said.

(Reporting by Gabriel Stargardter; Editing by Kevin Buckland)

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