logo
Two tourists die, fires erupt in Greece amid gale-force winds

Two tourists die, fires erupt in Greece amid gale-force winds

News.com.au5 days ago
Two Vietnamese tourists died at sea in Greece on Friday, the coastguard said, as gale-force winds confined many ferries to port, disrupting tens of thousands of summer travellers, and sparked wildfires.
A coastguard spokeswoman said a man and woman had died at the Sarakiniko beach on the tourist island of Milos in the Cyclades, as firefighters battled blazes near Athens and on the island of Cephalonia.
"The man and woman were found unconscious in the sea and were taken to the local health centre," the spokeswoman said.
"They were Vietnamese tourists on a cruise ship group. The woman fell in the water and the man apparently tried to save her," she said.
The civil protection ministry had said wind gusts would reach 88 kilometres (54 miles) an hour, especially in the southern Aegean and the Sea of Crete.
More than 200 firefighters backed by 11 water bombers and seven helicopters were battling a fire in Keratea, southeast of Athens, Costas Tsigkas, head of the association of Greek firefighter officers, told ERT state television.
"It's a difficult fire... (owing) to wind gusts," he said, adding that several communities had been evacuated.
"The fire front is seven kilometres, homes are under threat," a local mayor, Dimitris Loukas, told ERT, adding that the wind was complicating efforts to douse the blaze from the air.
The Cephalonia fire was earlier placed under control, local officials said.
National weather service EMY said the winds would weaken after midnight.
- 'Left stranded' -
The coastguard said most ferries were unable to depart on schedule from Piraeus and other Athens ports, especially to the Cyclades or Dodecanese islands. Several services were cancelled and others postponed.
At Piraeus, hundreds of people crowded outside a ferry that was bound for the Cycladic islands of Paros and Naxos, waiting for news on a possible departure.
Nearby, stranded travellers surrounded by rucksacks and suitcases formed a huge queue outside a ticket office and made desperate phone calls hoping to make rearrangements to save their journeys.
"There's huge lines, huge commotion, everyone's waiting in the sun and it's a very tough time," said Philip Elias, an American tourist.
Sergi Gros, a 51-year-old civil servant from Spain, said he was scrambling to find last-minute accommodation in Athens for two nights, having already lost his booking on the island of Astypalea.
"We arrived at 6:45 in the morning and they told us the ferry was cancelled," Gros told AFP, saying there was a "total lack of information".
"I don't think (the hotel) can be refunded because it's not their fault. It's a great shame because we booked with a big (ferry) company, and there are people who reserve months in advance... they left us stranded," he said.
Maritime connections with the Saronic islands near Athens including Aegina, Hydra, Poros and Spetses and the Ionian Sea were unaffected, the coastguard said.
Strong winds are common in Greece at this time of year, and firefighters have already faced several major blazes this summer, including on the islands of Evia and Chios and in the western Peloponnese.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Thousands battle Greece fires as heatwave bakes Europe
Thousands battle Greece fires as heatwave bakes Europe

News.com.au

time12 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Thousands battle Greece fires as heatwave bakes Europe

Greece on Wednesday battled to contain more than 20 wildfires including one menacing its third-largest city Patras as a heatwave stoked blazes and forced the evacuation of thousands in southern Europe. Spain, Portugal, France, Italy, the Balkans and Britain have this week wilted in high temperatures that fuel wildfires and which scientists say human-induced climate change is intensifying. Since dawn on Wednesday, 4,850 firefighters and 33 planes were mobilised across Greece on what promised to be "a very difficult day", fire service spokesman Vassilis Vathrakogiannis said. A fire near the ancient Mycenaean archaeological site of Voudeni, just seven kilometres (four miles) from Patras, threatened forested zones and homes, and the area was covered by a thick cloud of smoke, an AFP journalist reported. Fierce wind "is hampering the task of water bombers, and is making collecting water at sea more difficult", the president of the firefighter officers' union, Kostas Tsigkas, told public broadcaster ERT. In the western Achaia region in the Peloponnese, to which the coastal city of Patras belongs, around 20 villages were evacuated on Tuesday. Other fronts were burning on the popular tourist island of Zante and the Aegean island of Chios, scarred by a huge wildfire in June that ravaged more than 4,000 hectares. The Greek coastguard said it had helped evacuate nearly 80 people from Chios and near Patras. The national ambulance service reported 52 hospitalisations from Achaia, Chios and the western town of Preveza, including "a small number of firefighters", mostly for respiratory problems and minor burns. Temperatures are due to come close to 40C in parts of western Greece on Wednesday, including the northwest Peloponnese, national weather service EMY forecast. After Greece requested four water bombers from the EU Civil Protection Mechanism to bolster its resources, leftist opposition party Syriza criticised the conservative government's preparation for the fires that hit every year. Greece needed "a bold redistribution of resources in favour of civil protection", an "emphasis on prevention", better coordination and new technologies in its civil protection system, Syriza said. - 'Worst breeding ground' - At the other end of the Mediterranean, wildfires continued to dominate the news in Spain, where cooler temperatures and greater humidity were expected to help control blazes in which two people have died. Authorities in the northwestern region of Castile and Leon, where flames have threatened a world heritage Roman mining site, said almost 6,000 people from 26 localities had been evacuated from their homes. Bushy undergrowth and searing temperatures that have baked Spain for almost two weeks had created "the worst possible breeding ground for this situation", Castile and Leon's civil protection head Irene Cortes said. A total of 199 wildfires have scorched nearly 98,784 hectares across Spain this year, more than double the area burned during the same period in 2024. Neighbouring Portugal deployed more than 1,800 firefighters and around 20 aircraft against five major blazes, with efforts focused on a blaze in the central municipality of Trancoso that has raged since Saturday. Strong gusts of wind had rekindled flames overnight and threatened nearby villages, where television images showed locals volunteering to help the firefighters under a thick cloud of smoke. "It's scary... but we are always ready to help each other," a mask-wearing farmer told Sic Noticias television, holding a spade in his hand. Italian firefighters had extinguished a blaze that burned for five days on the famed Mount Vesuvius and spewed plumes of smoke over the Naples area. In Britain, temperatures were expected to peak at 34C in the country's fourth heatwave of the summer. The UK Health Security Agency warned of "significant impacts" on health and social care services for the parts of central and southeastern England where the harshest heat was forecast.

Europe heatwave: Child dies of heatstroke as record-breaking temperatures spark wildfires
Europe heatwave: Child dies of heatstroke as record-breaking temperatures spark wildfires

SBS Australia

timea day ago

  • SBS Australia

Europe heatwave: Child dies of heatstroke as record-breaking temperatures spark wildfires

A child and three men have died, and thousands have been forced from their homes as wildfires fuelled by a heatwave scorch southern Europe. A four-year-old Romanian boy died of heatstroke in Italy on Monday, days after being found unconscious in his family's car on the island of Sardinia. On Tuesday, an employee of a Spanish equestrian centre died from his injuries in a suburb north of Madrid, officials said — reportedly as he tried to save horses. Later, officials in Castile and Leon in northwestern Spain confirmed another man had been killed while fighting fires. In Montenegro, a soldier also died, and another was seriously injured when their water tanker overturned while fighting wildfires in the hills north of the capital, Podgorica. 'A significantly warmer world' Heat alerts were issued in Italy, France, Spain, Portugal and the Balkans, with temperatures expected to soar above 40C, and experts say the heatwave is another sign of climate change, which is fuelling longer, more intense and increasingly frequent bouts of extreme heat. "Thanks to climate change, we now live in a significantly warmer world," Akshay Deoras, a research scientist at the meteorology department in England's University of Reading told the Agence France-Presse news agency, adding that "many still underestimate the danger". Thousands forced from their homes Hundreds of residents of Tres Cantos, near the Spanish capital Madrid, fled from the fast-moving blaze, which was contained on Tuesday morning. Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said on X that rescue services were "working tirelessly to extinguish the fires." Elsewhere, about 2,000 people were evacuated from hotels and homes near the popular beaches of Tarifa in Andalusia, southern Spain. In Castile and Leon, dozens of blazes were reported, including one threatening Las Medulas, a UNESCO World Heritage site known for its ancient Roman gold mines. In neighbouring Portugal, firefighters battled three large wildfires, with the most serious near Trancoso in the centre of the country, where 700 firefighters were deployed.

Wildfires fuelled by heatwave hit tourism spots and forests across Europe
Wildfires fuelled by heatwave hit tourism spots and forests across Europe

ABC News

timea day ago

  • ABC News

Wildfires fuelled by heatwave hit tourism spots and forests across Europe

Firefighters across Spain, Portugal, Greece, Türkiye and the Balkans were battling wildfires, with another heatwave pushing temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius across parts of Europe. Global warming is giving the Mediterranean region hotter, drier summers, scientists say, with wildfires surging each year and sometimes whipping up into "whirls". "We are being cooked alive, this cannot continue," said Alexandre Favaios, a mayor in Portugal. On the outskirts of the Spanish capital, Madrid, a fire killed a man working at a horse stable and reached some houses and farms but was contained by Tuesday, regional authorities said. A man also died in a fire in Albania, while a 61-year-old Hungarian seasonal worker is suspected to have died of heat-related causes while picking fruit in Lleida, in Spain's eastern Catalonia region. In Montenegro's mountainous Kuči area, north-east of the capital Podgorica, one army soldier was killed and another badly injured when a water tanker they were operating overturned, the Defence Ministry said. In Tarifa, on the southernmost tip of the Iberian peninsula, beachgoers and celebrity chef José Andrés filmed flames and black smoke on the hills above whitewashed villas. More than 2,000 people were evacuated from there as the fire — believed to have started in eucalyptus and pine forests — spread, officials said. Helicopters doused the blaze with seawater. Authorities in Albania, Montenegro, Germany, Spain, Italy and France issued various types of heat warnings. In Spain, temperatures reached 44C in some regions, according to meteorology service AEMET, with minimal rainfall and windy conditions expected to exacerbate the fire risk. Spain's Interior Ministry has put national services on stand-by, while almost 1,000 members of the armed forces are already supporting firefighting. The country's rail operator said trains between north-western Galicia and Madrid were halted because of a fire. In Spain's largest region, Castile and Leon, more than 1,200 firefighters battled 32 wildfires on Tuesday and thousands of residents were told to leave their homes. Meanwhile, police said it had arrested a firefighter near the walled city of Avila, north-west of Madrid, who had confessed to starting a fire two weeks ago because of the potential income from work extinguishing it. In north Portugal, more than 1,300 firefighters backed by 16 aircraft were battling three large fires. One of them, in the Vila Real area, has been burning for 10 days. "It's been 10 days that our population is in panic, without knowing when the fire will knock on their door," local mayor Alexandre Favaios told broadcaster RTP, pleading for more government help. In Albania, swathes of forest and farmland have been burnt by wildfires in the past week, and 30 separate fires continue to burn, stoked by strong winds. The Defence Ministry said four army helicopters and 80 soldiers were helping firefighters. It also reported the death of a man suspected of having started in his backyard a fire that spread across a wider area. In neighbouring Montenegro, authorities backed by helicopters from Serbia and Croatia contained a wildfire near Podgorica on Tuesday, with the capital covered by smoke. In Gornja Vrbica, residents helped firefighters stop a fire from reaching a local church and cemetery, the Pobjeda newspaper reported. More help was expected from Austria, Slovenia and Italy under the EU civil protection mechanism. "Everything that can be paid for and bought will be compensated, but the memories that burned in these four rooms and the attic cannot be compensated," Dragana Vukovic, whose house in south-eastern Piperi was reduced to ruins, told Reuters. In Greece, at Europe's southernmost tip, wildfires in some cases fanned by gale-force winds forced the evacuation of several villages and a hotel on the tourist islands of Zakynthos and Cephalonia in the Ionian Sea, along with four other parts of the mainland. A wildfire in the southern Greek region of Achaia forced residents of five villages near an industrial zone to flee, while 85 firefighters and 10 aircraft tried to stop a fire from reaching houses near the western Greek town of Vonitsa. The picture was similar in Türkiye, where a large blaze in the north-western province of Çanakkale burned for a second day, prompting the evacuation of hundreds of residents. Reuters

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store