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Greek firefighters make progress against wildfires

Greek firefighters make progress against wildfires

Straits Times2 days ago
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Firefighters work to extinguish a fire from a building during a wildfire in Greece on Aug 13.
– Firefighters in Greece gained ground on Aug 14 against a wildfire outside the third-largest city of Patras while water bombers battled blazes on three other fronts.
The situation in the country's main port to Italy was much improved after an overnight struggle, fire department spokesman Vassilis Vathrakogiannis said in a televised address.
Firefighters in Patras were facing 'scattered' pockets but the fire was 'still active' in the eastern outskirts of the city of over 200,000, he said.
Officials on Aug 13 had
evacuated a children's hospital and a retirement home as the fire had moved dangerously close to the western Greek city.
Other important fires continued to burn on Aug 14 on the Ionian island of Zakynthos, the Aegean island of Chios and near the western city of Preveza, the spokesman said.
Some 600 ground crews and nearly 30 water-bombing aircraft were deployed from dawn in all locations.
Reduced wind intensity was aiding firefighting efforts.
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Greece this summer has faced several major forest fires amid high temperatures that scientists say human-induced climate change is intensifying. AFP
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S'porean laments that they ‘literally cannot get one single day of uninterrupted silence'

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Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox The thirty pig-nosed turtles under Acres' care are slated to be repatriated to Indonesia in January 2026. SINGAPORE - Wildlife rescue group Acres is looking to send 30 endangered pig-nosed turtles, seized from the wildlife trade in Singapore, back to Indonesia in January 2026, The Straits Times has learnt. The planned repatriation of these freshwater turtles, so named for their large, fleshy noses that resemble a pig's snout, will be one of the group's biggest and most ambitious yet, its CEO Kalaivanan Balakrishnan told ST. Acres, or the Animal Concerns Research and Education Society, has repatriated more than 70 animals since it was formed in 2001. This includes sending 51 Indian star tortoises, considered vulnerable to extinction, back to India in 2018 , and two critically endangered giant Asian pond turtles to Malaysia in 2019 . But sending the pig-nosed turtles home will be far more costly, Mr Kalaivanan said. 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