
Wildfires break out in Turkey, Syria and Greece - with towns near Athens evacuated
The Hellenic Fire Service and local authorities said that two villages - Tsakeoi and Limnionas - had been evacuated on the island of Evia after the blaze started late on Friday.
One fire service official said more than 160 firefighters, 46 trucks and five aircraft were deployed in southern Evia to put out the fire.
Southern Evia, to the east of Athens, was one of several regions in Greece placed on high alert for wildfires over gale-force winds forecast for today.
Images from Koropi, a town to the southwest of Athens, also show houses burnt down and helicopters dropping water on burning forests.
It marks the latest wildfires to break out in Greece - where blazes are common during the summer - as it tackles strong winds and dry conditions amid an early summer heatwave in southern Europe.
at least nine deaths across the continent.
A wildfire broke out in Achlia on the island of Crete on Wednesday, forcing thousands of residents and tourists to evacuate - with some taken to a nearby basketball arena and hotels in safer parts of the island.
The fire service official told Reuters on Friday that the fire in Crete was largely contained.
Meanwhile, blazes have also broken out on Turkey's west coast - the latest in a series of blazes which started in late June - as well as its southerly neighbour Syria.
At least five fires have been reported in Izmir after extreme heat, strong winds and low humidity. Two people have been killed by the blazes, while tens of thousands have been evacuated.
Fires also flared on both sides of the Turkish-Syrian border on Friday, with a new blaze reported near the town of Dortyol in Turkey's border province of Hatay.
The government department added that conditions have hampered efforts to bring the fire under control, and noted unexploded ordnance could be in some of the areas affected.

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