By Alfred Kueppers
MASLOVKA, Russia (Reuters) - Forest fires sweeping across European Russia on Friday killed at least 25 people and forced the evacuation of thousands in the hottest weather since records began 130 years ago.
Fanned by strong winds, fires ripped through woods and fields that have been scorched for weeks by a heatwave, incinerating hundreds of wooden houses.
"We don't know where to go," said Galina Shibanova, 52, standing outside her burning home in the town of Maslovka in the Voronezh region, about 500 km (300 miles) south of Moscow.
"We called the emergency services, and not one person answered the phone," said Shibanova, a gold crucifix around her neck reflecting the nearby flames.
Health Minister Tatyana Golikova said that 439 people had been injured in Voronezh alone and 43 were in a serious condition in hospital.
Russia has been sweltering since June in a heatwave that has destroyed crops and pushed thousands of farmers to the verge of bankruptcy.
Drought in some regions of Russia, one of the world's biggest wheat exporters, has sent global prices soaring to year highs, putting U.S. wheat futures on track for their biggest monthly gain since 1973.
The emergencies ministry said 238,000 people have been deployed to fighting peat and forest fires across 866 square km, an area about the size of Berlin.
Prime Minister Vladimir Putin cancelled meetings in Moscow to fly to the Nizhny Novgorod region, where at least 540 homes were destroyed. He ordered his government to allocate 5 billion roubles (105 million pounds) to help victims.
WILDFIRE
State television showed a crowd of women surrounding Putin, demanding to know if the government would pay for rebuilding their homes. "Don't worry, don't worry," said Putin. "I promise you the village will be fully rebuilt."
One woman said: "We are very thankful to you." Putin embraced her and kissed her on the cheek.
President Dmitry Medvedev ordered the military to help fight the fires and Putin warned that officials who failed to deal properly with the fires would be sacked.
"This is a calamity and could strike other regions," Medvedev told officials by video conference from Moscow.
Residents in Nizhny Novgorod had tried to fight the flames with buckets of water but state television channel Rossiya said 340 houses in one village were destroyed in 20 minutes.
One woman sat weeping in an armchair, surrounded by toys, as her house burnt down in front of her, a Reuters witness said. Another sat on a bench clutching religious icons saved from her burning home.
A spokeswoman for the Emergencies Ministry said 25 people had died in the fires, including two firefighters. At least 2,178 people have had their homes destroyed.
Thousands were evacuated, including 900 patients from a hospital in Voronezh that was threatened by the flames and 1,200 children from summer camps in Ryazan, the ministry said.
In Maslovka, Alexandra Yuryeva stood in front of her burnt-out house in shock, clutching a brown chicken tightly to her chest, the only possession she had left. "In my childhood there was the war, it's impossible, why can I not die in peace?" the 71-year-old said, as tears streamed down her face.
Adding to Russia's weather related woes, a hurricane caused by the sudden advent of a cold front ravaged parts of the northwestern Leningrad region on Friday night, killing at least seven people, an Emergencies Ministry official told Reuters.
(Additional reporting by Ludmila Danilova in Moscow; Writing by Conor Humphries and Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by David Stamp)