Firefighters from Spain and France have succeeded in containing a wildfire near the countries' shared Mediterranean coastal border after winds dropped enough to allow water bomber planes to fly.
More than 130 people had been evacuated from several villages overnight as strong winds fanned the flames around Portbou, a hilly forested area on the Spanish side of the border that is popular with tourists.
Spanish forestry rangers said the fire, which started yesterday, had destroyed around 573 hectares of land around Portbou, which has a cross-border rail service to France.
An official from the Catalonia regional government said this afternoon the fire had stopped spreading and the evacuation order had been lifted.
Residents should still stay at home and avoid unnecessary travel, officials said.
Around 300 firefighters from Catalonia and a dozen French fire engine crews teamed up to tackle the blaze.

They said winds had dropped sufficiently to allow water bombers and helicopters to intervene but could not say how long it could take to bring the fire completely under control.
Weather forecasters said winds would pick up again in the evening, after gusting at up to 100km per hour last night.
Earlier, the flames had come dangerously close to houses in the Llanca area south of Portbou.
Rail services were restarted between Portbou and Figueras to the south and power was restored to up to 4,000 homes, Catalan civil protection officials said.
Regional authorities said an investigation was underway into the cause of the fire.
Last year, some 500 blazes laid waste to more than 300,000 hectares in Spain, a record for Europe, according to data from the European Forest Fire Information System (Effis).
To date this year has seen some 70,000 hectares destroyed, according to Effis.