Nearly 900 firefighters were slowly bringing a wildfire under control that has raged for nine days on the Greek island of Evia, authorities said Wednesday, while fresh forces were deployed to fight a massive blaze on the Peloponnese peninsula.
“I think we can say that the fire fronts are slowly coming under control,” Yiannis Kontzias, mayor of Istiaia on Evia, told state TV ERT.

But the battle was far from won, with sudden flare-ups an ever present danger owing to bone-dry conditions on the ground.

The wildfires in Greece have scorched their way through thousands of hectares, leaving three dead, hundreds homeless, causing incalculable damage and capsizing the critical tourism season.

Advertisements

Those staying behind have been without running water and electricity, sometimes for days on end.

The fires have been fanned by the country’s worst heatwave in decades and the authorities have pointed the finger at climate change, which experts say increases the intensity and frequency of such extreme weather events.

Algeria has meanwhile become the latest Mediterranean country to be hit by devastating wildfires this summer, with the death toll there rising to 65 on Wednesday.

Eight people were killed in blazes in Turkey earlier in the month.

Advertisements

Peloponnese fires
The fire situation in Greece was most precarious on Wednesday in the mountainous and forested Peloponnese region of Gortynia.

Christos Lambropoulos, deputy governor for the broader Arcadia region, said efforts were concentrated on keeping the fire from reaching the area’s tallest mountain, Mount Mainalo.

“We estimate the front is over 10 kilometres (6.2 miles) long,” he told Skai TV.

“It’s a very thick forest with many communities,” he said.

Forces in Gortynia were beefed up Wednesday to nearly 600 firefighters including crews from the Czech Republic, Britain, France and Germany.

Advertisements

Another 60 firemen were tackling a smaller fire in Laconia, in the southeastern Peloponnese, the fire department said.

A huge multinational force of nearly 900 firefighters has meanwhile been deployed to back fire crews on the Greek island of Evia, where the town of Istiaia has been under threat for days.

It included Cypriots, Moldovans, Poles, Serbs, Slovaks, Romanians and Ukrainians. Serbian, Swedish and Swiss planes and helicopters were among a fleet of seven aircraft providing support.

“Yesterday, we saw the light of the sun for the first time in days,” Istiaia mayor Yiannis Kontzias told state TV ERT.

He was referring to giant smoke clouds that have choked residents and obstructed flights by water-bombing aircraft.

EU states and other countries have so far contributed 21 aircraft, 250 vehicles and more than 1,200 firefighters, some of whom were due to arrive by Friday.

HAVE YOU READ?:   He should have signed himself – Tinubu queried for missing peace accord signing

Support from abroad has helped avert an even greater disaster.

“When we arrived, it seemed like the whole of Greece was burning,” said Nicolas Faure, part of a detachment of more than 170 French firefighters that began arriving late last week.

‘Entire ecosystem destroyed’
Even as the immediate danger for his town receded, Kontzias said local businesses “face extinction” in coming months in a tourism season already decimated by the Covid-19 pandemic.

“We have lost the month of August, which would have sustained people here over the coming year.”

“(Local) tourism has been demolished, most (visitors) have left,” the mayor said.

“The damage is huge, and the environmental disaster will have economic repercussions for decades.”

From July 29 to August 11, more than 93,000 hectares (231,000 acres) were burnt in Greece, according to the European Forest Fire Information System. The average area burnt over the same period between 2008 and 2020 was 2,330 hectares.

A draft UN assessment seen exclusively by AFP called the Mediterranean a “climate change hotspot” and said increasing temperatures and aridity had lengthened fire seasons and “doubled potential burnable area”.

Dimitris Haliotis, the head of a Red Cross team, said that “the entire ecosystem is destroyed” on the island, with the loss of forest animals running in the hundreds.

Theodoros Roumeliotis, the local hoteliers president in the Greek spa town of Aidipsos, said August reservations had collapsed by 90 percent.

“It’s a colossal loss,” he told AFP.

“Right now, hotels are obliged to refund one million euros in reservations cancelled,” he said, adding that some operators were unlikely to survive the blow.

Calls for sackings
There have been growing calls in Greece for the resignation of top public safety officials who as recently as June had insisted that the country was well-prepared.

There was additional anger over the loss last week of much of the forest of Varibobi, one of Athens’ last remaining nature reserves. In that fire, the former royal estate of Tatoi narrowly avoided destruction.

Civil protection deputy minister Nikos Hardalias said Greece’s resources were “stronger than ever before”.

“We faced an operationally unique situation with 586 fires in eight days during the worst weather phenomenon in 40 years,” he said on Tuesday.

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis this week apologised to the nation for any possible “shortcomings” in the state’s response. He is to hold a press conference on Thursday.

The PM has pledged hundreds of millions of euros in additional funds for civil protection, reforestation and flood prevention.
The Guardian