
At least 3 dead and thousands displaced as wildfires rage across southern Europe
Outside the Greek port city of Patras, firefighters struggled to protect homes and agricultural facilities as flames tore through olive groves.
As water-dropping planes and helicopters swooped overhead, residents joined the effort, beating back flames with cut branches or dousing them with buckets of water.
Firefighting resources were stretched thin in many affected countries as they battled multiple outbreaks following weeks of heat waves and temperature spikes across Mediterranean Europe.
Aircraft rotated between blazes on the western Greek mainland, the Patras area and the island of Zakynthos. Athens also sent assistance to neighboring Albania, joining an international effort to combat dozens of wildfires. An 80-year-old man died in one blaze south of the capital, Tirana, officials said Wednesday.
Residents of four villages were evacuated in central Albania near a former army ammunition depot. In the southern Korca district, near the Greek border, explosions were reported from buried World War II-era artillery shells.
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez expressed condolences after the death of a firefighting volunteer in the hard-hit Castile and León region north of Madrid, where thousands have been displaced by evacuations.
The government raised its national emergency response level, preparing additional support for regional authorities overseeing multiple evacuations and highway closures.
A forestry worker was also killed Wednesday while responding to a wildfire in southern Turkey, officials said. The Forestry Ministry said the worker died in an accident involving a fire truck that left four others injured.
Turkey has been battling severe wildfires since late June. A total of 18 people have been killed, including 10 rescue volunteers and forestry workers who died in July.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


UPI
2 hours ago
- UPI
European Commission intervenes as wildfires kill at least 7 in Spain
The skeletal remains of a destroyed building still stand on Saturday in northwestern Spain's Galicia province. Photo by Brais Lorenzo/EPA Aug. 16 (UPI) -- The European Commission is deploying firefighting aircraft to Spain, where at least seven have died as 14 wildfires have flared amid a European heat wave. The commission is sending an unknown number of water-bombing planes to help put out the wildfires in Spain and wildfire-impacted areas in the Balkans, The Guardian reported on Saturday. The announcement came after a volunteer firefighter died on Thursday while fighting a wildfire in northern Spain's Castile and Leon region. A total of seven people have died in the Spanish wildfires along the nation's northern coastal areas, the BBC reported. "Death strikes us again with the loss of a second volunteer who has lost their life in Leon," Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said on Thursday, as reported by The Guardian. He described firefighting volunteers as "heroes" who are protecting the Spanish people and said the wildfire "threat remains extreme." Another volunteer firefighter died on Tuesday, and a Spanish man died while trying to save horses from a stable that caught fire near Madrid on Monday. Sanchez on Friday said wildfire conditions remain "very tough" as Spain's national weather agency reported an "extreme fire risk" in northern and western Spain, the BBC reported. The weather service predicted highs up to 104 degrees in Spain, where several wildfires have merged into a single conflagration that has closed several of the region's highways and halted rail services in northwestern Spain. Wildfires also have been reported in Portugal, France, Greece and the Balkans. Spain so far has reported about three times the number of wildfires that it normally experiences during a typical summer. The heatwave is predicted to continue at least until Monday with highs of up to 111 degrees with moderate winds that could spread airborne sparks and embers. The European Union reported 2,429 square miles of burnt land so far this year, and the Spanish wildfires account for more than 600 square miles of that total. Officials in Albania, Bulgaria, Greece and Montenegro have requested emergency assistance from the EU.


Newsweek
4 hours ago
- Newsweek
Deadly Wildfires Engulf Europe, Killing at Least Four
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Dozens of wildfires raging across southern Europe, fueled by high temperatures, droughts, and dry fuels, have killed at least three people in Spain and one in Portugal. Newsweek has reached out to Portugal's National Emergency and Civil Protection Authority and the European Forest Fire Information System for comment via email on Saturday. Why It Matters The fires come amid record-high temperatures in the region, with dry landscapes and materials further fueling fires from Greece to Portugal, marking one of the region's worst fire seasons on record. The European Union (EU) has sent firefighting planes to help battle the blazes, with five countries having requested assistance. Thousands of people have been forced to evacuate from their homes across the region, and around 100 have been injured across countries. What To Know Spain has been hit particularly hard, with more than 14 major fires, General Director of Emergency Services Virginia Barcones told the Associated Press. Wildfires have disrupted mass transit, forcing highway closures and suspending high-speed rail service. So far this year, more than 390,000 acres have burned in the country, according to the European Forest Fire Information System. Earlier this week, Spain confirmed a third death from the wildfires, a volunteer firefighter who sustained severe burns. Spain has arrested several people on suspicion of arson. In neighboring Portugal, nearly 4,000 firefighters have battled at least seven major blazes, according to the AP. The country is currently under a state of alert until late Sunday night. The former mayor of Vila Franca do Deão, Carlos Damaso, "was killed in a fire he was fighting in his parish," Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, the president of Portugal, wrote in Portuguese in a press release Friday. Burning trees are pictured during a wildfire in Carcastillo, northern Spain on August 10. Burning trees are pictured during a wildfire in Carcastillo, northern Spain on August 10. Eduardo Sanz/Europa Press via AP What People Are Saying AccuWeather wrote in an August 14 X post: "Europe is facing its worst wildfire season on record as deadly wildfires rage across France, Spain, Portugal, Greece, and Albania. More than 2.4 million acres have burned across Europe." Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez wrote in a Saturday X post: "All my encouragement and strength to the four injured members of @UMEgob in the Yeres fire, in León, and to their families. I thank them for their effort and dedication and hope they recover soon." The Spanish State Meteorological Agency (AEMET) wrote in a Friday X post: "This Friday, very high or extreme fire danger in most of the country. The danger will remain at very high or extreme levels during the weekend and Monday, days when the heatwave affecting us since the beginning of the month continues." 🔥 Este viernes, peligro de incendios muy alto o extremo en la mayor parte del país. El peligro seguirá en niveles muy altos o extremos durante el fin de semana y el lunes, días en los que continúa ola de calor que nos afecta desde comienzos de — AEMET (@AEMET_Esp) August 15, 2025 The United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction wrote in an X post: "Europe is experiencing a devastating wildfire season – wreaking havoc on landscapes, cities, and communities." What Happens Next? High temperatures are expected to continue throughout the weekend into Monday.


New York Post
7 hours ago
- New York Post
220 killed in Pakistan floods, more bodies pulled from landslides
BUNER, Pakistan (AP) — Flooding in a northwest Pakistani district has killed at least 220 people, officials said Saturday, as rescuers pulled 63 more bodies overnight from homes flattened by flash floods and landslides. One eyewitness, who escaped the deluges in Buner, described seeing floodwaters carrying hundreds of boulders and 'tons of rocks' crashing down. Pakistan has received higher-than-normal monsoon rainfall this year, which experts link to climate change, triggering floods and mudslides that have killed some 541 people since June 26, according to the National Disaster Management Authority. 5 People arrange cots with the bodies of victims as they prepare for their funeral following heavy rain and floods in Pakistan. REUTERS 5 Damaged houses in Buner district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, Pakistan REUTERS Hundreds of rescue workers are still searching for survivors in Buner, one of several places in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province where torrential rains and cloudbursts caused massive flooding on Friday, said Mohammad Suhail, a spokesman for the emergency services. Dozens of homes were swept away. First responders have been trying to recover bodies from the worst-hit villages of Pir Baba and Malik Pura, where most of the fatalities were, said Kashif Qayyum, a deputy commissioner in Buner. Local police officer Imtiaz Khan, who narrowly escaped the deluges, said floodwaters carrying hundreds of boulders struck and flattened homes within minutes. 'A stream near Pir Baba village in Buner swelled without warning. At first, we thought it was a normal flash flood, but when tons of rocks came crashing down with the water, 60 to 70 houses were swept away in moments,' Khan told The Associated Press, adding that many bodies were left mutilated. 'Our police station was washed away too and if we hadn't climbed to higher ground, we would not have survived.' Rescuers said they saw large swathes of Pir Baba village destroyed, wrecked homes, and giant rocks filling the streets as the water started to recede. 5 Mourners attended mass funerals after the floods, while authorities supplied resources to flood-affected people in Buner. AP 'It was not just the floodwater, it was a flood of boulders as well, which we saw for the first time in our lives,' said Sultan Syed, 45, who suffered a broken arm. Mohammad Khan, 53, said the floods 'came so fast that many could not leave their homes.' Most victims died before reaching the hospital, said Mohammad Tariq, a doctor in Buner. 'Many among the dead were children and men, while women were away in the hills collecting firewood and grazing cattle,' he said. 5 A paramedic with an injured victim at a hospital in Pir Baba, an area of Buner district, in Pakistan's northwest. AP Mourners attended mass funerals on Saturday, while authorities supplied tents and food items to flood-affected people in Buner. Local cleric Mufti Fazal said he led funeral prayers at multiple locations since Friday morning. 'Before yesterday's floods, the area was bustling with life. Now, there is grief and sorrow everywhere.' Schoolteacher Suleman Khan lost 25 members of his extended family, saying he and his brother survived only because they were away from home when the floods hit his village Qadar Nagar. 5 'Before yesterday's floods, the area was bustling with life. Now, there is grief and sorrow everywhere,' local cleric Mufti Fazal said as he led funeral prayers at multiple locations since Friday. AP According to the provincial disaster management authority, at least 351 people have died in rain-related incidents this week across Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and the northern region of Gilgit-Baltistan. Nearly 300 kilometers (about 186 miles) away in Indian-controlled Kashmir, rescuers scoured the remote village of Chositi in the district of Kishtwar on Saturday, looking for dozens of missing people after it was hit by flash floods two days ago, killing 60 and injuring some 150, about 50 in critical condition. Thursday's floods struck during an annual Hindu pilgrimage in the area. Authorities have rescued over 300 people, while some 4,000 pilgrims have been evacuated to safety. Such cloudbursts are increasingly common in India's Himalayan regions and Pakistan's northern areas, and experts have said climate change is a contributing factor. Pakistani officials said rescuers since Thursday have evacuated more than 3,500 tourists trapped in flood-hit areas across the country. Many travelers have ignored government warnings about avoiding vulnerable regions in the north and northwest. Pakistan witnessed its worst-ever monsoon season in 2022. It killed more than 1,700 people and caused an estimated $40 billion in damage.