Greece set to bury wildfire victims
ATHENS: Greece will this weekend begin burying the victims of a devastating wildfire near Athens which killed at least 88 people, and has prompted criticism of the government’s handling of the disaster.
Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras on Friday took political responsibility for the tragedy as opposition leaders said the government had failed to adequately safeguard lives.
Today, three members of the same family are due to be laid to rest in the first known funeral since the blaze broke out last Monday in the seaside village of Mati, 30km east of here.
“We will say our final goodbye to our much-loved Grigoris, Evita and Andreas... tragic victims in Mati,” the Fytrou family said in a statement published by the Athens news agency, asking media not to attend.
The search for the missing continues and many people remain in hospital, while the names of more victims have emerged.
Twin 9-year-old girls Sofia and Vasiliki Filippopoulou, whose pictures have featured internationally, were confirmed dead, state broadcaster ERT reported yesterday. DNA tests showed the girls and their grandparents died in the blaze at Mati.
Their grandfather’s burnt-out car was located outside a plot of land where 26 people died, with some of the victims found embracing each other in death.