Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Greece Fires Contained

I wanted to post this, very sad times in Greece. Over 60 people died because someone actaully started these fires. Very sad this madness was caused by people.

Greece fires contained, authorities focus on relief effort _ 3 weeks before elections
By NICHOLAS PAPHITIS (Associated Press Writer)
From Associated PressAugust 29, 2007 7:09 PM EDT


ATHENS, Greece - Greece's fire department said all major blazes were "generally receding," but that authorities remained on high alert for possible rekindling of the massive fires that have killed at least 64 people before a new heat wave forecast for the week's end.
In the southern Peloponnese peninsula, where 57 of the deaths were recorded, all the fronts were contained and firefighters - backed by more than 20 water-dropping aircraft - were moving in to extinguish lingering blazes.
"The fires are no longer spreading," fire department spokesman Nikos Diamandis said. "We had a drop in the wind, which we exploited." Temperatures also dropped to about 28 C (82.4 F) in the region, compared with 41 C (105.8 F) on Aug. 24, the day the fires raged unchecked.
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But late Wednesday authorities evacuated five villages near the mountain village of Karytaina in the central Peloponnese after winds rekindled a blaze. The fire department said Karytaina, which is crowned with a mediaeval castle, was not in immediate danger.
In the tiny village of Kato Kotyli, five kilometers (three miles) east of Karytaina, a handful of residents stayed behind, hosing down their houses. A fire truck took up position at the entrance to the village, while at least four large fire fronts were visible on surrounding hillsides.
At least two major fires still blazed out of control near the Albanian border to the northwest. On the hard-hit island of Evia, north of Athens, where the other seven deaths occurred, all blazes were contained. Diamandis said no inhabited areas were threatened.
With most fires seemingly under control, the conservative government will now focus on a vast relief effort, less than three weeks before national elections.
"Our main task now is to relieve the pain, the stress and the agony that the victims of the forest fires ... are feeling," deputy government spokesman Evangelos Antonaros told The Associated Press.
The inferno destroyed hundreds of homes in dozens of villages, fragile mountain ecosystems - that will require decades to revive - and an entire rural way of life in some of the Peloponnese's afflicted areas, threatening to turn thousands of villagers into environmental refugees.
The flames even licked the 2,800-year-old World Heritage site of Ancient Olympia, birthplace of the ancient Olympic Games.
More than 10,000 people, mostly dressed in black and bearing banners reading "No to the destruction of nature" gathered outside the house of parliament in central Athens late Wednesday to silently protest the destruction. Some demonstrators booed and taunted riot police, who responded by throwing stun grenades.
Arson has been widely blamed. Six people have been charged with deliberately setting fires. Up to 190,000 hectares (469,000 acres) were laid waste between Friday and Tuesday alone - 10 times the annual average for the past 50 years, according to the European Commission's European Forest Fire Information System, or EFFIS. A total of 275,000 hectares (679,000 acres) - an area almost the size of the small U.S. state of Rhode Island - has gone up in smoke since the start of the year.
Apart from the blow to the Peloponnese's fragile ecosystems, Greenpeace Greece director Nikos Haralambidis warned that mountain populations could end up as internally displaced "environmental refugees."
"There will be several thousand people faced with the choice of staying in a burnt land or moving to the cities," he said. "Their main source of income was olive oil production ... and new olive saplings need at least 15 years to produce a decent crop."
A helpline set up for fire victims and offers of help has received more than 40,000 calls so far, mostly from volunteers who want to contribute aid, Deputy Finance Minister Petros Doukas said.
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The Finance Ministry said it was suspending value added tax, or VAT, payments for people and companies and outstanding taxes in afflicted areas for six months and banning seizures of property for outstanding debts.
Although the government has already budgeted about a third of a billion euros (around US$450 million) for such aid, the Finance Ministry has said the cost was expected to be much higher.
The fires are dominating political debate before the elections. Criticism that the government failed to respond quickly enough - and its suggestions the fires resulted from an organized attack - could hurt Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis.
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Associated Press writers Elena Becatoros in Kato Kotyli; Patrick Quinn and Derek Gatopoulos in Athens and John F.L. Ross in Ancient Olympia contributed to this report.

3 comments:

Bagheera said...

I'm so glad you posted this, Butterfly. This is so tragic & heartbreaking. Think of all the history in this region...I hope the person responsible is persecuted to the fullest extent of the law.

butterfly42080 said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
butterfly42080 said...

They should be, I agree with you there. I mean, technically, they could be classified as serial killers~ over 60 people are dead because of them. They had to know they were going to kill people. It's just senseless.