At least 65 killed in Algerian wildfires, Greece and Italy burn
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[August 12, 2021]
By Karolina Tagaris and Hamid Ould Ahmed
ATHENS/ALGIERS (Reuters) - Exhausted Greek
firefighters battled blazes for a ninth day on Wednesday amid sweltering
temperatures that also helped stoke wildfires in Algeria, where at least
65 people died, and in southern Italy.
From Turkey to Tunisia, countries around the Mediterranean have been
seeing some of their highest temperatures in decades, as the United
Nations climate panel this week warned that the world was dangerously
close to runaway warming.
Greece, in the grip of its worst heatwave in three decades, evacuated
around 20 villages on the Peloponnese, though ancient Olympia, site of
the first Olympic Games, escaped the inferno.
About 580 Greek firefighters, helped by colleagues from France, Britain,
Germany and the Czech Republic, were battling blazes in Gortynia, near
Olympia.
Flare-ups continued to ravage Evia, Greece's second-largest island, just
off the mainland east of Athens and scene of some of the worst
devastation in the past week.
"If helicopters and water bombing planes had come right away and
operated for six, seven hours, the wildfire would have been put out in
the first day," said cafe owner Thrasyvoulos Kotzias, 34, gazing at an
empty beach in the resort of Pefki on Evia.
Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis has called it a "nightmarish summer"
and has apologised for failures in tackling some of the more than 500
wildfires that have raged across Greece.
'OUR IDENTITY IS TURNING TO ASHES'
At the other end of the Mediterranean, Algeria's government deployed the
army to help fight fires that tore through forested areas in the north
of the country, killing at least 65 people, including 28 soldiers.
The worst hit area has been Tizi Ouzou, the largest district of the
mountainous Kabylie region, where houses have burned and residents fled
to shelter in hotels, hostels and university accommodation in nearby
towns.
President Abdelmadjid Tebboune declared three days of national mourning
for the dead.
In southern Italy fires ravaged thousands of acres of land as
temperatures hit records well above 40 degrees Celsius (104°F) and hot
winds fanned the flames.
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Villagers in Northern Algeria desperately use water hoses and tree
branches to battle encroaching wildfires which have left 65 people
dead as of Wednesday.
Firefighters said on Twitter they had carried out
more than 3,000 operations in Sicily and Calabria in the last 12
hours, deploying seven planes to try to douse the flames.
"We are losing our history, our identity is turning to ashes, our
soul is burning," a local mayor in Calabria, Giuseppe Falcomata,
wrote on Facebook, after a 76-year-old man died when flames engulfed
his house.
A 30-year-old man died close to the city of Catania when his tractor
overturned as he was carrying water to put out flames, local media
reported.
Tunisia's capital Tunis recorded its highest ever temperature of 49C
(120F) on Tuesday, the Meteorological Institute said.
Turkey has also suffered nearly 300 wildfires over the past two
weeks which have devastated tens of thousands of hectares of
woodland, though only three were reported still burning as of late
Wednesday.
Turkey's northern coast, however, faced a different challenge -
floods after unusually heavy rainfall that tore down a bridge and
left villages without power.
The wildfires are not limited to the Mediterranean region.
California has suffered the second-largest wildfire in its history
that by late on Sunday had covered nearly 500,000 acres (2,000 sq
km).
The U.N. climate panel published a report on Monday that said
greenhouse gases in the atmosphere were high enough to guarantee
climate disruption for decades if not centuries.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaux; Writing by Gareth Jones; Editing by
Janet Lawrence)
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