/ 28 June 2007

Forest fires rage in scorching Greece

Wildfires swept through Greece on Thursday, killing two people and destroying homes after days of record high temperatures that led to at least nine heatstroke deaths and extensive power cuts.

Two men, aged 36 and 42, died trapped in flames after abandoning their truck in a forest fire outside the central Greek city of Larissa, fire officials said. A third man in the truck escaped unharmed. The blaze broke out on Wednesday and was still burning on Thursday.

An explosion in a power substation in Thessaloniki caused power failures of up to six hours in the northern port city and throughout the north-eastern provinces of Macedonia and Thrace, further burdening a grid strained by increased use of air conditioners.

The state-run Public Power Corporation said the blast — in which nobody was hurt — was caused by a transformer that malfunctioned and that efforts were under way to repair the damage.

More than 110 wildfires raged through thousands of hectares of forest and brush across the country, several for the second day, while parts of central Greece were declared in a state of emergency.

Fire officials said arson was to blame for at least one fire near Athens.

Interior Minister Procopis Pavlopoulos said firefighters were involved in a ”titanic” effort. ”We are facing an unprecedented situation,” he said.

On the resort island of Poros, firefighters brought under partial control a large blaze that destroyed at least 10 homes on Wednesday, and forced the evacuation of dozens of homes and three hotels.

Other major fires were burning on Mount Parnitha, north-west of Athens — where at least three homes were damaged — and Mount Pelion in central Greece, where three homes were destroyed and dozens evacuated.

Police briefly closed off a section of the country’s main north-south highway after billowing smoke from a fire near Tanagra, about 60km north of Athens, reduced visibility. The blaze, fanned by strong winds, was also threatening a local industrial park.

A total of 24 water-dropping planes and 13 helicopters nationwide were assisting hundreds of firefighters on the ground, officials said.

Italy’s civil protection agency said it had sent two extra aircraft to help the effort, while France and Portugal were to contribute a total of three planes after Greece asked its European Union partners for help.

The fires were sparked by an early summer heat wave that has caused at least nine heatstroke deaths — including a 103-year-old man — in Greece since Monday and killed dozens more in south-east Europe. Health Ministry officials said more than 140 people were hospitalised with heatstroke over the past 24 hours, with three in intensive care.

Temperatures remained below 40 degrees Celsius in most parts of the country on Thursday, with a high of 41 degrees in Athens, but emergency fire warnings remained in effect for most regions.

On Tuesday, the heat hit a high of 46 degrees, the highest for the month of June since 1889, according to government officials. — Sapa-AP