Greece wildfires spread, causing mass evacuations
Published18
hours ago
Thousands of tourists and residents have been
evacuated from towns north of the Greek capital, Athens, as wildfires spread
across the country.
Strong
winds and high temperatures are making it difficult to control the blazes,
which have killed at least two people, including a firefighter.
Huge clouds
of smoke and ash near Athens has meant some people there have also been urged
to leave their homes.
More than
150 fires have been reported. Six areas have been put on high alert.
Greece,
like many parts of Europe, has been grappling with extreme weather this summer.
Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said the fires showed "the reality of
climate change".
Hundreds of
firefighters are trying to control the fires with about 20 water-bombing
aircraft. Extra firefighters and planes are being sent in from countries
including the UK, France and the US.
The UK
government said Home Secretary Priti Patel was sending "experienced
firefighters" after witnessing the "devastating effect" of the
fires while in Greece earlier this week.
Fanned by
unpredictable winds, the worst blazes are around the north of Athens. A
38-year-old volunteer firefighter was killed by a falling electricity pole in a
suburb of the city.
The other
victim was the president of the Athens Chamber of Commerce, Konstantinos
Michalos. He was found unconscious in a factory close to where a fire was
raging.
A further
20 people have been injured.
The fires
are expected to continue to burn and spread on Saturday, despite a drop in
temperatures to around 35C (95F) from above 40C earlier this week.
Thousands
of people were earlier ordered to leave their homes outside Athens as the blaze
tore through houses, cars and businesses.
Fires have
also been raging on the nearby island of Evia, and areas close to ancient
Olympia, the birthplace of the Olympic Games.
Government
minister Nikos Hardalias said firefighters were facing extremely dangerous
conditions.
"Wildfires
of unprecedented intensity and spread, all our forces are fighting the battle
day and night to save lives, together with volunteers," he said.
Hundreds of
residents and tourists on Evia have been evacuated using ferries and fishing
boats, as wildfires closed in on its shores.
"We're talking about the apocalypse, I don't know
how to describe it," Sotiris Danikas, a coastguard official on the island,
told broadcaster ERT.
The air in
northern Athens is full of the smell of smoke, and there is a thin layer of ash
on the ground. People from some of the outer suburbs have been evacuated from
their homes.
Last night,
one man stared in horror as the flames headed down the mountainside towards his
house.
Planes and
helicopters carrying water to drop on the flames flew overhead, but emergency
crews are struggling to stop the wildfires from spreading.
The strong,
hot winds are not helping. Greece, like much of the rest of Europe, has been
grappling with extreme weather this summer.
In
neighbouring Turkey, authorities are battling the country's worst-ever
wildfires.
Eight people
have been killed and tens of thousands evacuated along the southern coast. Six
more neighbourhoods near a power station were evacuated on Friday.
Climate
change increases the risk of the hot, dry weather that is likely to fuel
wildfires.
The world has
already warmed by about 1.2C since the industrial era began and temperatures
will keep rising unless governments around the world make steep cuts to
emissions.



Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário