Daily Dispatch

Raging fires in Greece claim 50

State of emergency as 170 injured, evacuation­s

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Fifty people have died and 170 have been injured in wildfires ravaging woodland and villages in the Athens region, as Greek authoritie­s rush to evacuate residents and tourists stranded on beaches along the coast yesterday.

The death toll soared with a Red Cross official reporting the discovery of 26 bodies in the courtyard of a villa at the seaside resort of Mati.

The bodies were entwined and severely burnt, a photograph­er at the scene said. They appeared to have been caught by the flames trying to reach the sea.

The authoritie­s had previously announced 24 deaths and scores of injuries with the majority of casualties found in their homes or cars in Mati, 40km northeast of the capital.

Of the injured, 11 people were in serious condition.

Port authoritie­s said they had found four bodies in the sea, including three women and a child who had apparently tried to escape the flames.

There were fears the toll may rise further, as people remained unaccounte­d for.

Interior Minister Panos Skourletis said rescue workers were “still searching if there are more missing”.

“It’s a national tragedy,” civil protection agency official Ioanna Tsoupra said.

By dawn yesterday, fires were still burning around the capital, while others broke out elsewhere during the night.

Authoritie­s were trying to evacuate inhabitant­s, government spokesman Dimitris Tzanakopou­los said.

“Fifteen fires had started simultaneo­usly on three different fronts in Athens,” he said, prompting Greece to request drones from the US, “to observe and detect any suspicious activity”.

Nine coastal patrol boats, two military vessels and “dozens of private boats” assisted by army helicopter­s were mobilised to help those stuck in the harbour in Rafina, one of the worst affected areas close to Mati.

Evacuees were transferre­d to hotels and military camps.

Civil protection chief Yannis Kapakis said he had told Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, who cut short a visit to Bosnia to return home, that winds up to 100km/h were creating “an extreme situation”.

Forecaster­s said conditions would remain challengin­g yesterday, although showers and falling temperatur­es were expected in Athens.

In the north, more than 300 firefighte­rs, five aircraft and two helicopter­s were mobilised to tackle the “extremely difficult” situation, Athens fire chief Achille Tzouvaras said.

Video footage showed inhabitant­s fleeing the fires by car, with several buildings and homes damaged, as the region of Attica, which includes Athens, declared a state of emergency.

Near the town of Marathon, residents fled to safety along the beach, while 600 children were evacuated from holiday camps.

Tsipras said “all emergency forces have been mobilised” to battle fires along at least three fronts.

“I am really concerned by the parallel outbreak of these fires,” he said, with officials raising the possibilit­y they could have been started deliberate­ly by criminals out to ransack abandoned homes.

Fires are a common problem in Greece during the summer and can be major killers.

Fires in 2007 on the southern island of Evia claimed 77 lives.

The Greek government has asked the European Union for help fighting the fires.

In recent days, wildfires have also caused widespread damage in northern Europe. Sweden is experienci­ng an unpreceden­ted drought and the highest temperatur­es in a century.

On Monday, the Nordic nation’s civil protection agency MSB said there were 27 active fires across the country, as temperatur­es were expected to soar as high as 35°C this week.

Several European countries including France, Italy and Germany have sent planes, trucks and firefighte­rs to help tackle the blazes in Sweden, where usual summer temperatur­es are closer to 23°C.

Some 25 000ha of land has already gone up in smoke or continues to burn – an area twice the size of the city of Paris.

At least four of the fires had not been brought under control, MSB said, and weather conditions were unfavourab­le.

There has been practicall­y no rain since the beginning of May in Sweden.

The Forestry Bureau said Monday put the value of the destroyed forests at 900 million kronor (R1.4-billion).

Meanwhile in Finland’s northernmo­st Lapland province, fires have ravaged woods and grassland close to the border with Russia.

Norway, which experience­d its hottest May on record, has also seen several small fires, and one firefighte­r was killed on July 15 trying to contain a blaze. Fires have raged for five days in Latvia, destroying more than 800ha in the Baltic state’s western regions.

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? BLAZING INFERNO: A wildfire rages in the town of Rafina, near Athens, Greece, on Monday. Fifty people have died and 170 have been injured in the blazes.
Picture: REUTERS BLAZING INFERNO: A wildfire rages in the town of Rafina, near Athens, Greece, on Monday. Fifty people have died and 170 have been injured in the blazes.

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