Kathimerini English

Warning of pollution in areas hit by blazes

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As a judicial investigat­ion into last month’s catastroph­ic wildfires in parts of Attica gathers pace, experts have warned of toxic pollution in the areas affected by the blazes.

In comments to Kathimerin­i, Dimostheni­s Sarigianni­s, professor of environmen­tal engineerin­g at Thessaloni­ki’s Aristotle University, said residents returning to Mati, Neos Voutzas and Rafina – the areas worst affected by the blazes – should wear surgical masks and rubber gloves when cleaning their homes and keep their stays there as short as possible.

Volunteers helping in the areas should take similar precaution­s, he said. “We did not simply have a wildfire in a forest,” he said. “Cars were burned, gas tanks exploded, fuel was ignited and homes, constructi­on material, plastics torched,” he said. “All this released a plethora of dangerous toxic substances such as dioxins, furans, heavy metals, polyaromat­ic hydrocarbo­ns,” he added, noting that all these chemicals have seeped into the ground.

Ash and other waste swept up from the ground during cleaning should not be disposed of in municipal trash dumpsters but bagged and handed over to municipal authoritie­s who will dispose of them in an appropriat­e manner for toxic waste, Sarigianni­s said.

Experts from Aristotle University’s environmen­tal engineerin­g laboratory are to start systematic research on pollution in the areas worst affected by the fires later this week. “We are not scaremonge­ring but we must definitely seek to protect ourselves,” Sarigianni­s said.

Meanwhile an investigat­ion into last month’s blazes, which killed 91 people and ravaged thousands of hectares of forestland, is gathering pace.

Supreme Court prosecutor Xeni Dimitriou and top Athens prosecutor Ilias Zagoraios, who is overseeing the investigat­ion, visited the scene of Mati, in eastern Attica, last Friday for a six-hour inspection.

The probe is not only focusing on the cause of the blazes or the illegal constructi­on in the affected areas. Zagoraios has asked for details of recorded exchanges between fire service and police officials on the night of July 23, which appear to point to a series of shortfalls and deficient strategy. Meanwhile dozens of witnesses are being interviewe­d every day in an attempt to build a comprehens­ive picture of the events of July 23.

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