Emergency crews deployed on Santorini as an earthquake swarm worries
Greek experts
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[February 03, 2025]
By DEREK GATOPOULOS
SANTORINI, Greece (AP) — Schools were closed and emergency crews
deployed on the volcanic Greek island of Santorini on Monday after a
spike in seismic activity raised concerns about a potentially powerful
earthquake.
Precautions were also ordered on several nearby Aegean Sea islands — all
popular summer vacation destinations — after more than 200 undersea
earthquakes were recorded in the area over the past three days.
“These measures are precautionary, and authorities will remain
vigilant,” Civil Protection Minister Vasilis Kikilias said late Sunday
following an emergency government meeting in Athens. “We urge citizens
to strictly adhere to safety recommendations to minimize risk.”
While Greek experts say the quakes, many with magnitudes over 4.5, are
not linked to Santorini’s volcano, they acknowledge that the pattern of
seismic activity is cause for concern.
The frequency of the quakes, which continued throughout Sunday night and
into Monday, has worried residents.
“I have never felt anything like this and with such frequency — an
earthquake every 10 or 20 minutes. Everyone is anxious even if some of
us hide it not to cause panic, but everyone is worried," said Michalis
Gerontakis, who is also the director of the Santorini Philharmonic
Orchestra.
“We came out yesterday and performed. Despite the earthquakes, the
philharmonic performed for a religious occasion,” Gerontakis said. "When
you are playing, you cannot feel the quakes but there were earthquakes
when we were at the church. No one can knows what will happen. People
can say whatever they like, but that has no value. You cannot contend
with nature.”
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Government officials met with scientists throughout the weekend and on
Monday to assess the situation, while schools were also ordered shut on
the nearby islands of Amorgos, Anafi and Ios.
On Santorini, residents and visitors were advised to avoid large indoor
gatherings and areas where rock slides could occur, while hotels were
instructed to drain swimming pools to reduce potential building damage
from an earthquake.
Fire service rescuers who arrived on the island on Sunday set up yellow
tents as a staging area inside a basketball court next to the island's
main hospital.
“We arrived last night, a 26-member team of rescuers and one rescue
dog," said fire brigadier Ioannis Billias, adding that many residents,
including entire families, spent the night in their cars.
Some residents and local workers headed to travel agents seeking plane
or ferry tickets to leave the island.
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Ruins of a settlement, including a former Catholic monastery, lie on
the rocky promontory of Skaros on the Greek island of Santorini, on
June 15, 2022. (AP Photo/Petros Giannakouris, File)
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“We’ve had earthquakes before but never anything like this. This
feels different," said Nadia Benomar, a Moroccan tour guide who has
lived on the island for 19 years. She bought a ferry ticket Monday
for the nearby island of Naxos. “I need to get away for a few days
until things calm down.”
Others said they were willing to take the risk. Restaurant worker
Yiannis Fragiadakis had been away but said he returned to Santorini
on Sunday despite the earthquakes.
“I wasn’t afraid. I know that people are really worried and are
leaving, and when I got to the port it was really busy, it was like
the summer," Fragiadakis said. "I plan to stay and hopefully the
restaurant will start working (for the holiday season) in three
weeks.”
Crescent-shaped Santorini is a premier tourism destination with
daily arrivals via commercial flights, ferries, and cruise ships.
The island draws more than 3 million visitors annually to its
whitewashed villages, built along dramatic cliffs formed by a
massive volcanic eruption more than 3,500 years ago.
Prominent Greek seismologist Gerasimos Papadopoulos cautioned that
the current earthquake sequence – displayed on live seismic maps as
a growing cluster of dots between the islands of Santorini, Ios,
Amorgos, and Anafi — could indicate a larger impending event.
“All scenarios remain open,” Papadopoulos wrote in an online post.
“The number of tremors has increased, magnitudes have risen, and
epicenters have shifted northeast. While these are tectonic quakes,
not volcanic, the risk level has escalated.”
In Santorini’s main town of Fira, local authorities designated
gathering points for residents in preparation for a potential
evacuation, though Mayor Nikos Zorzos emphasized the preventive
nature of the measures.
“We are obliged to make preparations. But being prepared for
something does not mean it will happen,” he said during a weekend
briefing. “Sometimes, the way the situation is reported, those
reports may contain exaggerations... so people should stay calm.”
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