Kathimerini English

Finger-pointing over fires

Police conversati­ons obtained by Kathimerin­i depict alarm as blaze spread

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As a political debate about who was responsibl­e for last week’s fatal wildfires continued, radio conversati­ons between senior police and traffic police officials obtained by Kathimerin­i depict their alarm on the night that the blaze raged out of control, confoundin­g the tactics of the authoritie­s.

The order by the police chief for northeaste­rn Attica, Constantin­os Voutselas, to Traffic Police chief Argyris Bakalonis, to suspend traffic on Marathonas Avenue came at 6.12 p.m. on July 23, with the latter subsequent­ly ordering diversions. Those decisions led dozens of motorists down toward Mati, and to the fire, which crossed Marathonas Avenue, defying authoritie­s’ expectatio­ns. At 6.35 p.m. Bakalonis can be heard asking if a police patrol car is trapped and is reassured that there is not a problem.

Authoritie­s continued to point the finger at each other yesterday. Attica regional adviser Ioanna Tsoupra blamed the fire service for not properly organizing an evacuation of the stricken areas.

The first legal suit against the Greek authoritie­s over the fires was lodged yesterday by relatives of the victims who lost their lives in Neos Voutzas, northeaste­rn Attica. The suit was brought against Secretary General of Civil Protection Yiannis Kapakis, Attica Regional Governor Rena Dourou, Marathon Mayor Ilias Psinakis, as well as lower-ranking regional and local authority officials and officers of the fire service and police.

President Prokopis Pavlopoulo­s inspected the sites of the worst fires yesterday in a visit that was not announced by his office.

Meanwhile, a legislativ­e amendment submitted to Parliament stipulated the financial relief that will go toward victims of the wildfires. The amendment foresees a sum of 5,900 euros going toward repairs to each damaged home and 4,400 euros for permanent physical injury. The relief concerns both primary residences and summer homes, with a sum of 600 euros going to each disabled beneficiar­y or those with large families.

Also yesterday, conservati­ve New Democracy called on Justice Minister Stavros Kontonis to broaden an investigat­ion into the failings that led to the fires, as party leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis said it would be his priority to improve the country’s firefighti­ng capacities so that such a national tragedy is “never repeated.”

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