The Borneo Post (Sabah)

High winds hamper Greek firefighti­ng efforts

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ATHENS: Greek firefighte­rs were struggling to control blazes for a third successive day yesterday, as flames fanned by high winds forced people to flee homes near the capital.

Fires on the coast near Athens, in the western Peloponnes­e and the Ionian island of Zakynthos were of most pressing concern, a fire service spokesman told AFP.

The army was called in to assist firefighte­rs around Kalamos, 45 kilometres east of Athens, where a fire has been burning since Sunday.

At least five properties were destroyed and several homes evacuated, authoritie­s said, as smoke from the blaze clouded the sky in the capital yesterday morning.

More than 90 fires broke out across Greece since Sunday, according to authoritie­s.

Firefighte­rs were also battling flames near the town of Amaliada in the western Peloponnes­e and on the tourist hotspot island of Zakynthos, where several fires – some thought to have been started deliberate­ly – were raging.

“Such a situation is unheard of,” regional fire chief Vassili Matteopoul­os told local media on Monday.

“We had 22 fires on Zakynthos just in the last 24 hours.”

Efforts to control the blazes were complicate­d by winds reaching speeds of 40-50 kilometres per hour, according to the fire service.

Soaring temperatur­es and tinder-dry forest floors across southern Europe have led to a rash of devastatin­g wild fires, notably in Portugal, where 64 people died in a massive inferno in June.

Southeaste­rn France and Corsica have also been affected.

In Portugal yesterday, some 1,450 firefighte­rs were tending to least four blazes in the central Santarem and Castelo Branco regions, the emergency services said.

 ??  ?? An aerial view of a wildfire burning near the village of Metochi, north of Athens, Greece. — Reuters photo
An aerial view of a wildfire burning near the village of Metochi, north of Athens, Greece. — Reuters photo

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