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Sunday, August 8, 2021

'Our end is near': Blazes show no sign of reprieve in Greece

People try to move parts of their belongings to safety as a wildfire rages in a wooded area north of Athens. Wildfires burning across Greece have been caused by widespread droughts and unseasonably high temperatures that have soared to between 40 and 47 degrees Celsius during the past 10 days. Angelos Tzortzinis/dpa People in Greece woke up on Sunday to another day that resembled hell on Earth in some areas, as wildfires continued to tear through the country. "We are alone. Our end is near," Giannis Kotzias, mayor of the endangered city of Istiaia told Greek broadcaster Skai. The harbour town is in the north of Euboea, Greece's second-largest island, which has been the site of some of the worst blazes this season. Tempers are also flaring on the island, where aerial firefighting only began on Sunday. Many complain of being left to their fate, battling blazes that stretched across multiple square kilometres and sometimes turned into walls of flame stretching up to 7 kilometres. "They left us to burn," one man told Skai, noting how the country's firefighting plane fleet has been focusing on the area around Athens up until now. But officials defended their actions, citing limited resources. "We couldn't be everywhere. You just have to imagine what would happened if the fires north of Athens had expanded to a densely settled area," said one firefighter. There were reports that the situation was stabilizing north of Athens on Sunday, with fire crews reporting that they have been able to extinguish some smaller blazes, according to one official in comments to the state broadcaster. Crews surveying the situation north of Greece said they had counted about 300 houses and industrial buildings destroyed in the blazes and said it would take about 15 days to restore power to the region. Water service has yet to be fully restored as well. Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis has made a point of saying multiple times in recent days that the priority is saving lives, not property or forests. There are about 4 million residents of greater Athens, where Euboea has a population of about 220,000 and the area most endangered by flames is primarily wooded. That said, thousands of people have been evacuated from the island. Ferries were active again on Sunday, picking up people from the shoreline because it was no longer safe to head to the roads. The smoke from these flames was spreading and had even been detected in Athens, 100 kilometres away. The situation was little better on the Peloponnesian Peninsula, where a fire is burning south of the town of Megalopolis and another one on the peninsula's western part is moving ever inland in the heavily wooded area of Arcadia, near Olympia. The regional mayor is demanding more air support to fight the fires and has also slammed decisions to keep firefighting aircraft near Athens until now, thus allowing fires to burn out of control in other parts of the country. The fires have drawn international attention and drawn teams of firefighting assistance from across Europe and the Middle East. Volunteers try to put out a forest fire in a wooded area north of Athens. The wildfires in Greece were still burning out of control, with no all-clear possible on most of the fire fronts. Angelos Tzortzinis/dpa


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