The Borneo Post

Blame game blows up over deadly Greek wildfires

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ATHENS: Grief and shock over Greece’s deadliest wildfires were clouded yesterday by a bitter debate over who was to blame, as the opposition rejected the government’s suggestion that the blazes were started deliberate­ly.

Deputy Citizen Protection Minister Nikos Toskas on Thursday suggested there were ‘serious’ signs that the worst of the fires, which killed scores this week east of Athens, was the result of arson.

Forensics experts pressed ahead yesterday with the difficult task of identifyin­g the bodies of the 82 people known to have perished in the catastroph­e.

An official in the identifica­tion effort told Greek radio that most of the bodies were completely carbonised, meaning the task will likely take several more days to complete.

Amid public anger over the government’s handling of the aftermath, Toskas told reporters on Thursday that “a serious piece of informatio­n has led to us opening an investigat­ion” into possible ‘criminal acts’.

Officials citing informatio­n from satellite maps have said that 13 fires broke out at the same time across the region of Attica — which includes Athens — on Monday.

But the government has come in for strong criticism over its response to the disaster despite a 40-million- euro relief fund for those affected. Defence Minister Panos Kammenos was heckled on Thursday as he visited the coastal region of Mati, where most of the fatalities occurred.

“You left us to God’s mercy, there’s nothing left,” shouted one resident.

But Kammenos went on the counter- attack, telling the BBC that illegal constructi­on in the past was also to blame for the disaster.

The ‘majority’ of houses on the coast had been built without the proper licences, he said.

“After this tragedy I think it is the moment to understand that it’s dangerous for them and for their families to not follow the rules and the laws,” the minister said.

Experts have said that a mix of poor urban planning, including a lack of proper access routes and the constructi­on of too many buildings next to combustibl­e forest areas, contribute­d to what were Europe’s worst wildfires this century.

The opposition New Democracy party reacted stingingly to Toskas’ claim that the fires were the result of criminal acts.

“This deplorable spectacle of rejecting any responsibi­lity can only provoke anger,” it said in a statement.

The fires struck coastal villages popular with holidaymak­ers and burned with such ferocity that most people fled to the safety of the sea with just the clothes on their backs.

Survivors spoke of harrowing scenes including entire families burned alive in their homes.

“We were alone, there was nobody to help us. Everybody did what they thought they had to do to survive on their own,” resident Evi Kavoura told AFP.

The disaster unleashed a wave of solidarity and many survivors were being looked after by voluntary organisati­ons, who were providing them with accommodat­ion, clothing and food.

Amid mountains of food and baby nappies in a gymnasium in Rafina, near Mati, one of the volunteers, Joanna Kefalidou, an English teacher on holiday, said: “We’re Greeks and Greeks tend to come together in times of need and help each other as much as they can.” — AFP

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 ??  ?? Aerial view of the area after a wildfire, in Mati, Greece in this picture obtained from social media. — Reuters photo
Aerial view of the area after a wildfire, in Mati, Greece in this picture obtained from social media. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? This general view shows damaged vehicles in a open parking area of northern Athens after a flash flood struck the Greek capital. The flood follows fires, which broke out in Greece on July 23, the deadliest in living memory. — AFP photo
This general view shows damaged vehicles in a open parking area of northern Athens after a flash flood struck the Greek capital. The flood follows fires, which broke out in Greece on July 23, the deadliest in living memory. — AFP photo

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