
Acropolis shuts, outdoor work halted as heatwave scorches Greece
The Greek culture ministry said the world-renowned site would be shut till 5:00 p.m. (1400 GMT) 'for the safety of workers and visitors, owing to high temperatures.'
The four-day heatwave confirmed by meteorologists began Sunday is the second to grip Greece since late June.
Temperatures are expected to reach 42 Celsius (107.6 Fahrenheit) on Tuesday, with a maximum of 38 Celsius in Athens.
Similar temperatures are expected on Wednesday.
To protect outdoor workers, the labor ministry has decreed a work stoppage from 12:00 to 5:00 p.m. in various parts of the country, including several islands.
The stoppage mainly affects construction work and delivery riders.
'Days with a heatwave make my job more difficult,' cycle-riding courier Michalis Keskinidis told AFP.
'We drink a lot of water to protect ourselves from the heat, combined with electrolytes, and take breaks whenever possible,' the 43-year-old said.
The 2,500-year-old Acropolis, built on a rock overlooking the capital that offers little shade, draws tens of thousands of visitors daily.
Last year it recorded some 4.5 million visitors, an increase of over 15 percent compared to 2023.
Officials had been forced to order similar shutdowns in the past two years in heatwave conditions.
The Greek civil protection authority has warned of high fire risk in the greater Athens area, in central Greece and the Peloponnese peninsula.
Greece's fire department has been dealing with up to 50 fires daily, the head of the Greek fire service officers' union Constantinos Tsigkas told state TV ERT.
Elsewhere, Serbia's hydrometeorological service RMHZ warned that weather conditions could fuel more fires, after 620 fires were recorded Monday.
But there are also thunderstorms expected in Serbia's northern Vojvodina region, as well as in western and central areas.
RHMZ has also warned of the possibility of hail and hurricane-force gusts of wind.
Croatia has already felt the impact of storms since Monday, with several of the country's regions affected.
Two people were injured and hospitalized in Vinkovci after a storm knocked down a power line on a family house near the eastern town, police said.
The authorities said they had taken dozens of calls over wind-related emergencies including trees blocking roads, damaged roofs and power failures.
On Tuesday, heavy rain and gale-force winds flooded roads, knocked down trees and caused power outages at the Croatian port town of Split, the state-run HRT broadcaster reported.
At the town's port, a ferry broke its moorings and hit a catamaran and a tourist excursion boat, sinking the latter.
There was similar trouble further north, with storms raging in Hungary and Slovakia.
In Budapest, strong winds damaged roofs, felled trees onto roads and downed power lines on Monday, with the national meteorological service HungaroMet measuring winds up to 137 kilometers (85 miles) per hour locally.
Rail traffic was severely disrupted across Hungary with full restoration of services potentially requiring weeks, according to Construction and Transport Minister Janos Lazar.
In Slovakia, gale-force winds caused power outages and blew off the roof of a block of flats in the eastern town of Gelnica and fallen trees disrupted road and railway transport across the region.
The country's weather service SHMU has issued a storm warning with heavy rain, wind and hail for Tuesday, mainly for central and eastern Slovakia.
Hashtags

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


Arab News
14 hours ago
- Arab News
Two dead as Cyprus battles wildfire in searing heat
SOUNI, Cyprus: Two people have died in a wildfire outside Cyprus's second city of Limassol fanned by strong winds and temperatures that were forecast to reach 44C, authorities said on Thursday. Police said two charred bodies were found in a burnt out car believed to have been caught up in the blaze that erupted on Wednesday afternoon. 'We express the deep sorrow of the state over the unjust loss of two of our fellow citizens during the devastating wildfires,' said government spokesman Konstantinos Letymbiotis. Announcing relief measures for the affected communities, Letymbiotis said that 'what is unfolding in our country... is unprecedented' with 'multiple simultaneous wildfire outbreaks.' Health authorities said two people were admitted to hospital with severe burns while another 16 were treated for less serious injuries. Fire service spokesperson Andreas Kettis said the blaze, which started in the village of Malia in the hills above Limassol, ravaged 100 square kilometers (nearly 40 square miles). He said there were 'no active fronts' in the fire but intense 'flare-ups' continued in the area. Authorities issued an extreme heat alert for the Mediterranean holiday island as temperatures were expected to peak at 44C. More than 250 firefighters and 75 vehicles were deployed to battle the blaze. The government has asked neighboring countries to send aircraft to support the firefighting effort. Justice Minister Marios Hartsiotis told public broadcaster CyBC that Jordan had two firefighting aircraft on stand-by while two more were expected to come from Spain. Israel said it would send later on Thursday a military aircraft 'to provide aerial support to Cyprus in its battle against the fires sweeping the island.' Hartsiotis said 106 people had to spend the night in temporary accommodation after several villages were evacuated in the face of the advancing flames. Scores of homes are feared to have been damaged or destroyed by the fire, with 16 communities left without electricity for airconditioning or refrigeration in the searing heat. 'When I entered my house, I saw the mountain and the valley full of flames,' said Antonis Christou, a resident of Kandou, one of the villages affected by the fire. 'I cried, really I cried, because people got burnt, and someone got burnt while in his car.' Fire service chief Nikos Longinos told CyBC that he had passed on witness testimony to the police which suggested that the blaze might have been started deliberately. Cyprus is hit by wildfires almost every year during the island's hot, dry summers. A 2021 wildfire in Larnaca district killed four Egyptian farmworkers.

Al Arabiya
17 hours ago
- Al Arabiya
Wizz Air to resume Israel flights as it quits Abu Dhabi
Budget carrier Wizz Air plans to return to full-capacity in Israel by September as it positions itself as the largest inbound carrier into the country, Chief Executive Jozsef Varadi told Reuters on Thursday. The Hungary-founded airline earlier announced first quarter profit below expectations as a result of plane groundings, and instability in the Middle East that forced frequent airspace closures and hit travel demand. Wizz Air suspended Israeli flights in June during the Israel-Iran war. It now plans to resume flights on August 8, although competitor Ryanair has said it will not return to Israel until October 25 at the earliest, and British carrier easyJet will not return to the region until March next year. 'Operations are totally safe and secured right now. The situation can change, and it has changed a few times before, but we have a very robust system to monitor this from a safety and security perspective,' Varadi said in an interview. He acknowledged that European carriers were cautious about their return and that Wizz Air's presence in Israel would be 'larger than all European airlines combined.' Wizz Air pilots and staff had earlier complained about being asked to fly over the region given the turmoil of the last two years. The airline announced in July it would close the loss-making Abu Dhabi base it set up six years ago to drive Middle East expansion. Only 5 percent of the capacity to Israel was located in Abu Dhabi, Varadi said, meaning the exit from the hub was unlikely to have a major impact on Wizz's strategy in Israel. Varadi reiterated that much of the Abu Dhabi capacity would be relocated to central and Eastern Europe.


Saudi Gazette
18 hours ago
- Saudi Gazette
Wildfire kills 10 firefighters and rescue workers in Turkey
ISTANBUL — At least ten firefighters and rescue workers were killed and 14 others injured on Wednesday while trying to contain a wildfire in north-western Turkey, the country's forestry minister said. The fire broke out in a forested area of Eskisehir province. Forestry Ministry Ibrahim Yumakli said five of the dead were forestry personnel and five were members of the AKUT rescue organisation. The fatalities bring Turkey's wildfire death toll this year to 13, as blazes fuelled by strong winds, extreme heat and dry conditions continue to spread. Yumakli said a sudden shift in wind direction caused the flames to engulf the group. The cause of the fire was not immediately known. "Starting tomorrow, we are facing extraordinary temperatures and extreme wind shifts. Once again, I call on all 86 million citizens to be vigilant and exercise extra caution," he said. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the victims had fought "to protect our forests at cost of their lives."The country's justice minister said two prosecutors had been assigned to investigate the has been battling wildfires since June 26. Earlier this month, an elderly man and two forestry workers were killed in a blaze near the town of Odemis in Izmir said seven wildfires were still active across the country on often faces forest fires in the summer months amid rising temperatures. Particularly in Central Anatolia, the Aegean and Mediterranean regions, fires threaten both natural and human life. In 2021, largest forest fires destroyed hundreds of thousands of hectares of land warn that such fires are becoming both more frequent and more destructive due to climate change. — Euronews