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Fires raging through Quebec on Saturday, May 29, 2010. A raging forest fire is seen in La Tuque, Que., on Friday, May 28, 2010. More than 200 residents evacuated from their homes sit tight in a school, La Tuque, Quebec, on Friday May 28, 2010.

Winds hamper efforts to battle Quebec fires

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CTV News Video

CTV Montreal: Maya Johnson on the fires
Firefighters were crossing their fingers the rainy forecast for Monday will help quell 52 blazes raging across Quebec, but officials say the light drizzle won't have enough of an impact on the flames.
CTV National News: Catherine Sherriffs reports
Thousands of people across central and northern Quebec are waiting and worrying, as crews continue to battle around 50 fires that are threatening a number of small communities.
CTV Montreal: Melanie Morin, SOPFEU
Melanie Morin, the fire information officer from Quebec's forest protection group, SOPFEU, speaks with Tarah Schwartz about the latest on the fires raging throughout Quebec.
CTV News Channel: Jean-Francois Millette
A spokesperson for the Red Cross explains that while the situation in Joliette is improving, residents of La Tuque will need help for at least a week longer.

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Fires raging through Quebec on Saturday, May 29, 2010. A raging forest fire is seen in La Tuque, Que., on Friday, May 28, 2010. More than 200 residents evacuated from their homes sit tight in a school, La Tuque, Quebec, on Friday May 28, 2010.

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Fires raging through Quebec on Saturday, May 29, 2010.

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Date: Sat. May. 29 2010 12:04 PM ET

High winds were expected to make work difficult on Saturday for crews charged with battling dozens of fires burning throughout Quebec.

About 51 fires are burning across the province, according to fire information officer Melanie Morin, and nine of those are considered out of control.

While that is an improvement over the 16 that were out of control on Friday, high winds will likely challenge firefighters to make headway on the others, Morin said.

"Today it really will be the wind," Morin told CTV News Channel Saturday morning in a telephone interview from Maniwaki, Que.

"Mother Nature has a great role in fire activity. Tomorrow we are supposed to get lighter winds and by Monday hopefully some precipitation. So if we get through today then after that we should be getting some help from Mother Nature."

Environment Canada forecasts for the region call for winds between 20 and 30 kilometres an hour both Saturday and Sunday.

Fires are not unusual at this time of year for Quebec, according to Morin, but this year fires have spread easily due to unusually warm and windy conditions. Officials believe many of the fires were started by lightning.

More than 330 fires have burned more than 69,000 hectares, Morin said, the majority in the last week alone.

The hardest-hit area is Haute-Mauricie, with "seven or eight out-of-control fires in that one region," she said.

The fires have forced more than 2,400 people to leave their homes. Four communities in Haute-Mauricie have been evacuated, including Wemotaci, a reserve north of Trois-Rivieres. Residents there have been relocated to La Tuque, where they will be housed in a local school.

About 1,000 people in the town of Manawan, and about 100 people in Obedjiwan, have also been ordered out of their homes.

Manitoba and New Brunswick, as well as the states of Maine and Massachusetts, have sent fire crews and equipment to help tackle the fires. Morin said there are about 1,000 crew and firefighters on the ground.

With files from The Canadian Press

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