Greece gets EU help to battle disastrous wildfires
Greece had earlier requested help from EU allies and two Italian aircraft were expected on July 27.
ATHENS - Greece battled wildfires that have
ravaged homes and sparked evacuations for a second day on July 27, with the help of Czech firefighters and Italian aircraft expected to arrive later.
Fires were still raging on the morning of July 27 in the Peloponnese area west of the capital, as well as on the islands of Evia and Kythera, with aircraft and helicopters resuming their work in several parts of the country at dawn.
'Today is expected to be a difficult day with a very high risk of fire, almost throughout the territory', fire brigade spokesman Vassilis Vathrakogiannis said on July 27, though he added that the situation was improving.
Forecasters predicted the strong winds that have fanned the flames would die down on July 27 in most areas but warned that Kythera, an popular tourist island with 3,600 inhabitants, continued to face 'worrying' windy conditions.
Evacuation messages were sent to people on the island, which lies off the south-eastern tip of the Peloponnese, early on July 27 as the fire was raging unabated.
'Houses, beehives, olive trees have been burnt,' Mr Giorgos Komninos, deputy mayor of Kythera, told state-run ERT News channel.
'A monastery is in direct danger right now,' he said, adding that half of the island had been burnt.
Dozens of firefighters supported by three helicopters and two aircraft were battling the Kythera blaze, which erupted on the morning of July 26 and forced the evacuation of a popular tourist beach.
Greece had earlier requested help from EU allies and two Italian aircraft were expected on July 27, according to the fire brigade, with units from the Czech Republic already at work.
Heatwave conditions
Eleven regions of Greece still face a very high fire risk, according to officials.
Firefighters are working in several areas of the Peloponnese and there were numerous flare-ups overnight
on the island of Evia , near Athens, where the flames have laid waste to swathes of forest and killed thousands of farm animals.
Workings have been scrambling since dawn to repair serious damage to Evia's electricity network and some villages were facing problems with water supply.
Further south on Crete, reports said fires that broke out on the afternoon of July 26 and destroyed four houses and a church and largely been contained.
Police were reportedly bolstering forces in Kryoneri north of Athens, as fears grow that looters could target houses abandoned by their owners fleeing a fire that erupted on the afternoon of July 26 but was mostly contained on July 27.
Greece has endured heatwave conditions for almost a week, with temperatures passing 40 deg C in many areas.
On July 26, the temperature reached 45.2 deg C in Amfilohia, in western Greece.
The extreme heat is expected to die down from July 28.
In June, fires on Greece's fifth-biggest island Chios, in the northern Aegean, destroyed 4,700ha of land, while early July a wildfire on Crete forced the evacuation of 5,000 people.
The most destructive year for wildfires was 2023, when nearly 175,000ha were lost and there were 20 deaths. AFP

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