Dayton Daily News

Crews search for missing in Greek wildfires

- By Costas Kantouris and Elena Becatoros

Rescue crews MATI, GREECE — were searching Wednesday through charred homes and cars for those still missing after the deadliest wildfires to hit Greece in decades decimated seaside areas near Athens, killing at least 79 people and sending thousands fleeing.

There was no official indication as to how many people might be missing, and some took to social media and Greek television stations with appeals for informatio­n on their loved ones.

Survivors described dramatic scenes of people fleeing to beaches and being forced to swim out to sea despite gale-force winds and high waves to escape choking smoke and flaming pine cones raining down into the water.

Fire service spokeswoma­n Stavroula Malliri said the death toll had increased by five to 79. There were fears it would increase further as rescue crews gradually went through the hundreds of burnt homes, while others searched the coastline and the sea.

More than 280 firefighte­rs were still in the area to the northeast of Athens in the wider Rafina area, dousing the remaining flames to prevent flare-ups. A further 200 firefighte­rs backed up by a water-dropping helicopter were tackling the second forest fire west of the capital, near Agioi Theodori, where local authoritie­s pre-emptively evacuated three communitie­s, a children’s summer camp and three monasterie­s overnight, according to the fire department.

Flags across Greece flew at half-staff after the prime minister declared three days of national mourning.

The story of one man desperatel­y searching for his children highlights the plight of many families looking for relatives amid the Greece wildfires.

Yiannis Philipopou­los appeared on television early Wednesday appealing for help to locate his missing twin daughters, who he said he had spotted on television footage arriving in the port of Rafina in a fishing boat

The two fires on either side of the Greek capital started Monday within hours of each other, fanned by gale-force winds that hampered firefighti­ng efforts.

The speed with which the blaze northeast of Athens spread took many by surprise, and is believed to have contribute­d to the high death toll. during the evacuation of people from beaches overnight Monday to Tuesday.

Philipopou­los said he and his wife recognized 9-year-old Sophia and Vasiliki in the news footage after spending a fruitless day searching hospitals and giving DNA samples at the Athens morgue.

Philipopou­los said the girls had been with his parents, of whom there

“We couldn’t see any fire. The fire came suddenly. There was so much wind, we didn’t realize how it happened,” said Anna Kiriazova, 56, who survived with her husband by shutting themselves in their house instead of trying to flee through the flames.

Kiriazova said they used a garden hose to douse their was no sight in the footage. He said the images gave him hope his children were alive and urged anyone with informatio­n to contact him.

The captain of the fishing boat said authoritie­s had recorded the names of rescued people as they disembarke­d. The names of the two girls, however, appeared not to be among them.

— ASSOCIATED PRESS house in the Mati area near Rafina with water, and credited the fact that their window frames were metal instead of wood for their home being spared.

“We shut ourselves in the house, we closed the shutters, we had towels over our faces,” she told The Associated Press. “The inferno lasted about an hour. I have no words to describe what we lived through.”

Her 65-year-old husband, Theodoros Christopou­los, said the couple decided to take shelter indoors because the narrow roads were jammed.

“There was a great panic because the whole street was blocked by cars,” Christopou­los said. “Shouting, hysteria, they could see the fire was coming with the wind. It already smelled a lot, the sky was black overhead and in no time at all the fire was here.”

Hundreds of others abandoned cars and fled to nearby beaches, from where they were evacuated hours later by coast guard and private boats. Dozens swam out to sea despite rough weather to escape the intense heat and choking smoke.

One woman told state television she fled into the sea with her daughter and grandchild­ren, aged 13 and 15, and they were forced to swim out beyond the shallows along with many others who had sought shelter on the beach.

“The sea was burning, the flaming pine cones were falling into it,” said the woman, who gave only her first name, Mary. “We couldn’t stay (in the shallows).”

Thick smoke blacked out the sky, and the group quickly lost their bearings.

“The sky was smoky and black, and the sea stormy,” she said. “There were a lot of waves, huge waves ... they were coming like mountains over us.” In desperatio­n, her grandchild­ren shouted for help at firefighti­ng planes flying overhead.

After more than four hours at sea, the group was picked up by a fishing boat with an Egyptian crew, which went on to pick up others from the sea, including the body of at least one person who had drowned, the woman said.

With the number of missing unclear, authoritie­s appealed for people to call them if they were searching for loved ones. Some people also turned to Greek television and radio stations, asking for informatio­n from the public for relatives they hadn’t heard from since the blaze.

 ?? THANASSIS STAVRAKIS / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A man stands next to his burned house and car as he speaks on his cellphone in Mati, east of Athens, on Wednesday. Wildfires decimated seaside areas, killing at least 74 people.
THANASSIS STAVRAKIS / ASSOCIATED PRESS A man stands next to his burned house and car as he speaks on his cellphone in Mati, east of Athens, on Wednesday. Wildfires decimated seaside areas, killing at least 74 people.

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