Muscat Daily

Cyprus says huge forest blaze fully ‘under control’

-

Nicosia, Cyprus - Firefighte­rs in Cyprus said on Monday they had brought under control the island’s worst blaze on record, which ripped through mountain forests and farmland, killing four people and destroying scores of homes.

Water-bombing planes from Greece and Israel and British aircraft from bases on the Mediterran­ean island helped douse the huge fire, which blackened 55sqkm of the Troodos Mountains.

The Cyprus Forestry Department said Monday that ‘the fire that broke out on Saturday... came under full control today’ at 8.00am (0500 GMT).

Four Egyptian farm labourers aged in their 20s and 30s were killed by the flames as they tried to escape on foot after their car plunged into a ravine.

The wildfire, described as the worst since the Republic of Cyprus was establishe­d in 1960, destroyed 50 homes, damaged power lines and forced the evacuation of ten villages, authoritie­s reported.

“Everything was a nightmare and pure hell here, the village was surrounded by fire,” said Akis Giorgiou (45) from the hamlet of Arakapas.

The fire, fanned by strong winds and exacerbate­d by a heatwave that has baked the island in temperatur­es over 40 degrees Celsius, sent up a vast cloud of smoke that was visible from sea and from the other side of the Troodos mountain range.

More than 600 people from the emergency services and army were involved in tackling the blaze, along with a dozen aircraft and 70 fire trucks as well as a reconnaiss­ance drone, the forestry department said.

'A tragedy'

Firefighte­rs were still deployed en masse on Monday around the badly-hit village of Arakapas, near Limassol, to tackle any potential new outbreaks, the department said.

AFP reporters had seen thick gnarled trunks of ancient olive trees reduced to smoulderin­g stumps and grey ash replacing yellowed scrub as far as the eye could see.

A 67 year old farmer was arrested and remanded in custody on suspicion of having unintentio­nally started the enormous blaze while burning stubble, a charge he denied.

Police said an eyewitness had seen him leaving Arakapas in his car at the time the fire started there.

He could face charges of recklessly causing four deaths.

Interior Minister Nicos Nouris said the four Egyptians’ charred bodies had been found outside the village of Odos in Larnaca district.

Their burnt-out vehicle was discovered at the bottom of a ravine and the four bodies were some 600m away.

The Egyptian government said they were farm workers from the North African country, while Nicosia vowed in a tweet to ‘stand by the victims’ families... offering every support’.

‘It is a tragedy,’ President Nicos Anastasiad­es said on Twitter on Sunday.

Anastasiad­es described the fire as the worst event since 1974, when the island was divided after Turkey occupied its northern third.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Fires rage at different parts of a forest on the slopes of the Troodos mountain chain, in Cyprus on Saturday
(AFP) Fires rage at different parts of a forest on the slopes of the Troodos mountain chain, in Cyprus on Saturday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman