The Herald

Greek firefighte­rs battle raging forest fire near capital as thousands flee homes

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FIREFIGHTI­NG planes have resumed operations to tackle a major forest fire on the northern outskirts of Athens that forced thousands to flee their homes on Tuesday amid the country’s worst heatwave in decades.

The fire in the Varibobi and Tatoi suburbs of the Greek capital was the worst of 81 wildfires that broke out around the country in 24 hours from late on Monday.

Five water-dropping planes and nine helicopter­s were helping more than 500 firefighte­rs, soldiers and numerous volunteer groups on the ground, the fire department said.

“It was another exceptiona­lly difficult night,” civil protection chief Nikos Hardalias said while visiting a f mobile ire department co-ordination centre yesterday morning.

He said firefighte­rs had reduced four active fire fronts to one overnight. “There is still a lot of work to be done,” he added.

The fire was fuelled by tinder-dry conditions caused by a protracted heatwave that began last week and sent temperatur­es soaring to 45C.

There were no reports of deaths or serious injuries. The fire burned homes, businesses and vehicles, and sent a large cloud of smoke over Athens on Tuesday night.

The government announced it would provide hotel rooms for local residents for as long as they are unable to return to their homes. On Tuesday, residents left the area in cars and on foot, while riding schools in the area raced to move horses from the path of the flames.

Apart from the fire north of Athens, two more major forest fires were still burning yesterday, one on the island of Evia and one in the south-western Peloponnes­e.

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