
Hundreds of firefighters battle wildfires on Greece's Chios island for third day
Some 444 firefighters assisted by eight aircraft have been deployed to the island in the northeastern Aegean Sea to tackle the fires that have torn through swathes of forest and agricultural land and forced hundreds of villagers to evacuate in recent days.
Chios is in the midst of the tourist season and authorities also want to prevent the fires reaching areas famous for producing mastiha, a natural resin harvested from mastic trees.
Authorities issued a new alert on Tuesday, advising residents of a seaside village southwest of Chios town, the island's capital, to leave as white smoke rose over a nearby beach. Livestream from Greece's public broadcaster showed a helicopter spraying water over the area.
"A lot of work is still needed to bring the wildfires under control," a Greek fire brigade official who requested anonymity told Reuters. Northerly winds were complicating firefighting efforts, they added.
Greece, Europe's southernmost tip, is often hit by wildfires during its hot and dry summers but authorities have blamed a fast-changing climate for fuelling more destructive blazes in recent years.
Athens has paid out hundreds of millions of euros in damages related to extreme weather to households and farmers and to update firefighting equipment.
It has a record 18,000 firefighters this year in anticipation of a challenging fire season.

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


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
More than 1,500 people evacuated in Crete amid wildfire as Europe heatwave continues
A wildfire fanned by gale-force winds has forced the evacuation of more than 1,500 people on the Greek island of Crete, officials have said, as large swathes of continental Europe baked in a punishing early summer heatwave linked to at least nine deaths. About 230 firefighters, along with 46 vehicles and helicopters, were battling the blaze on Thursday after it broke out 24 hours earlier near Ierapetra on the south-east coast of the country's largest island, threatening to engulf houses and hotels. A fire brigade spokesperson, Vassilis Vathrakogiannis, said: 'There are wind gusts in the area, some measuring 9 on the Beaufort scale, triggering rekindling and hindering firefighting efforts.' He added that four settlements had been evacuated. Residents and tourists were taking shelter at an indoor stadium and some had left Crete by boat, authorities said. Local media reported some homes had been damaged. An estimated 5,000 more holidaymakers left south-east Crete independently. Like the rest of Crete, Ierapetra – a seaside resort with a permanent population of 23,000 - takes in thousands of tourists in the summer. The island's arid, uneven landscape, criss-crossed by gullies, makes it hard for firefighters to tackle blazes. A separate fire was raging in the Halkidiki region of Greece, with 160 firefighters and 49 vehicles involved in the emergency response, while in Turkey, thousands of people fled blazes in Cesme and Odemis in the western coastal province of Izmir. An elderly man died in the blaze near Odimis, about 62 miles (100km) east of Izmir, in one of three villages evacuated in the area. 'The village was evacuated but an elderly, bedridden patient could not be saved,' a local MP told Turkish TV. Vathrakogiannis said the risk of destructive wildfires remained 'very considerable' in July, the hottest month of the year in Greece, although the country had largely escaped the heatwave still gripping other parts of southern and central Europe. Nearly 500 firefighters were battling wildfires in eastern Germany that severely injured two emergency workers and forced the evacuation of more than 100 people near Gohrischheide, on the border between the states of Saxony and Brandenburg. The blazes have burned through hundreds of hectares of heathland and were still not under control on Thursday, with firefighters unable to reach parts of them because they were on a former military training area with unexploded ammunition. The worst appeared to be over in France, with the south-east the last area set record temperatures of up to 36C, but parts of Spain, Italy, Austria, Hungary, Slovakia, Poland and Croatia were all forecast to hit the mid-30s on Thursday. Italian authorities issued red alerts on Thursday for 18 cities including Rome, Milan, Turin, Bologna, Genoa and Palermo, meaning that the heat is so intense that it poses a risk not just to the sick and elderly but the young and fit too. Rome also said temporary power blackouts were possible as power consumption surges from air conditioners. At least five people have died in the heatwave in Italy, including two, aged 75 and 60, on beaches in Sardinia. Temperatures on the island, where wildfires have been raging, have exceeded 40C in recent days. In Genoa, an 85-year-old man died of heart failure in hospital. A 47-year-old construction worker died near Bologna and a 53-year-old died woman in Palermo. A measure halting outdoor work, for example on construction sites and farms, during the hottest part of the day has taken effect nationwide, although it is not an obligation and many people are continuing to work their normal hours. In Spain, the media reported that the two victims of a wildfire that consumed more than 5,500 hectares (13,590 acres) of mostly agricultural land in Torrefeta i Florejacs in Lleida province were aged 32 and 45, and had died of smoke inhalation. Temperatures in central Albania reached 40C on Thursday, and with little rain expected until September fears are rising for local agricultural output. Serbia's state meteorological institute also warned 'extreme drought' was already affecting crops. Scientists have said Europe's heatwaves have arrived earlier than usual this year, with temperatures surging by up to 10C in some regions as warming seas encourage the formation of a 'heat dome' over much of the land mass, trapping hot air.


Sky News
4 hours ago
- Sky News
Greece: Wildfire tears through southern Crete - forcing more than 1,500 to flee homes and hotels
A fierce wildfire driven by gale-force winds has torn through southern Crete, forcing the evacuation of more than 1,500 people from homes and hotels. The blaze, which ignited near the village of Achlia, in the Ierapetra area of the Greek island's southern coast, swept across forests and farmland overnight into Thursday. Crews battled the flames with 230 firefighters and 10 aircraft dropping water from above. Some residents were evacuated by boat, and the coast guard kept six vessels on standby for further sea rescues. Several homes were damaged as flames surged through hillside forests, fuelled by strong winds. "It's a very difficult situation," said Nektarios Papadakis, a civil protection official. "The fire is hard to contain. Right now, they cannot stop it." Evacuated tourists were taken to a nearby basketball arena and hotels in safer parts of the island, while mobile phone alerts were issued, urging residents to leave immediately and not return to defend their homes. As the fire approached residential areas, clouds of ash filled the sky and emergency vehicles lined roads near the resorts of Ferma and Achlia. Several people were treated for breathing problems, but no serious injuries have been reported. Wildfires are common during Greece's hot, dry summers - and the fire risk remains high across Crete and southern Greece, according to the fire service. The disaster recalls the deadly 2018 wildfire in Mati, near Athens, where more than 100 people were killed - many trapped in homes or forced into the sea to escape the flames.


BreakingNews.ie
4 hours ago
- BreakingNews.ie
Firefighters injured tackling wildfires in eastern Germany
Wildfires in eastern Germany have severely injured two firefighters and forced the evacuation of more than 100 residents. Nearly 500 firefighters were battling the fires that broke out on Tuesday in Gohrischheide on the border between the eastern states of Saxony and Brandenburg. Advertisement One female and one male firefighter suffered burns and were seriously injured. The fires have burned hundreds of hectares and were still not under control on Thursday, and a state police helicopter equipped with special cameras to detect pockets of embers has been deployed, German news agency dpa reported. A firefighter extinguishes embers from a forest fire fanned by strong winds in Germany (Daniel Vogl/dpa via AP) Firefighters were having difficulty getting close to the flames because parts of the wildfires were on a former military training area where there is a risk of ammunition detonating. The villages of Heidehauser and Neudorf and parts of the village of Lichtensee were evacuated. Residents received mobile phone alerts directing them to only take essentials, especially identification and cash. Advertisement The notice advised them to inform neighbours and 'cover your mouth and nose with improvised respiratory protection (cloth, piece of clothing, surgical mask)'. District officials called on people travelling by car to avoid the region. Severe heat in Germany and elsewhere across Europe in recent days has plagued residents and led to several wildfires across the continent.