Greek wildfire damages homes, forces evacuation of childrens camp, retirement home, monastery
Greek wildfire damages homes, forces evacuation of childrens camp, retirement home, monastery
19 July 2012
published by www.washingtonpost.com
Greece –– ATHENS Greek authorities evacuated a childrens summer camp, a retirement home and a monastery near Athens on Thursday as a wildfire swept through forest land, damaging at least five homes. The blaze was one of several dozen reported in the country over the past two days.
Greeces fire brigade said two people were lightly injured in the wildfire near the town of Keratea, some 40 kilometers (25 miles) southeast of the capital. One man suffered burns, while a motorcyclist was hit by a burning electricity pole.
Officials said 300 children were evacuated as a precaution from the camp, and an unspecified number of people from the retirement home and the monastery.
More than 170 fire fighters, assisted by seven water-dropping planes and two helicopters, managed to bring the blaze under partial control by late Thursday.
The cause of the fire was not immediately clear, but such blazes are common in the hot, dry summer months. More than 60 people were killed when forest fires devastated southern Greece in 2007.
Another two fires were burning through the islands of Zakynthos in the west of Greece and Crete in the south, but inhabited areas were not under threat, the fire brigade said.
Nearly 80 wildfires were reported over the past two days across the country, and least six villages were evacuated Wednesday in southern Greece and Crete. The fires follow a weeklong heat wave, during which temperatures reached 43 degrees Celsius (109 Fahrenheit).
The latest blazes come as half of debt-crippled Greeces vital fleet of firefighting planes was grounded due to maintenance difficulties. Fire brigade spokesman Nikos Tsongas said 11 of the 21 air tankers were out of action.
Greeces new coalition government warned earlier this week that steep budget cuts had hurt the countrys fire-fighting effort, and requested assistance from the European Unions civil protection mechanism.
Tsongas said Spain and Italy, facing their own outbreak of wildfires, would have difficulties in making planes available to Greece, while other countries in the EU mechanism were being considered.