ATHENS: Hundreds of firefighters battled Greece's first major forest fire of the summer yesterday, as experts warned of a "huge ecological disaster" in the nature conservation area near Athens. The fire, which broke out late Wednesday in the Geraneia mountains some 90 kilometers (55 miles) west of the capital, is "one of the biggest in the past 20 to 30 years, and has come early in the season," fire chief Stefanos Kolokouris told ANT1 television.
He said better weather conditions allowed firefighters to bring the main front of the outbreak under control late on Friday, but there remain "several active and scattered" blazes. More than 270 firefighters, backed by 16 aircraft and by the army, were fighting the blazes, the fire service said. No injuries have been reported, but a number of houses have been damaged or destroyed and a dozen villages and hamlets evacuated. The scale of the damage, notably for farmers, will only be clear once the fire is completely under control, the civil protection agency said.
But experts and associations quoted in Greek media have warned of an "ecological disaster on an immense scale". Some 54 percent of the dense and hitherto protected pine forests have been burnt, the leftist Avghi daily said. And 6.1 percent of the mountain range is part of the European Union's Natura 2000 network of nature conservation sites. Euthymios Lekkas, professor of environmental disaster management at the University of Athens, said the fires have burnt more than 55 square kilometers (21 square miles) of pine forest and other land, some of it agricultural.
"It's a huge ecological disaster that needs work to avoid landslides and terrible flooding in the autumn," he told ERT public television. The civil protection agency said the blaze started near the village of Schinos next to the resort of Loutraki, apparently by someone burning vegetation in an olive grove.
Tortoises and hedgehogs
Smoke from the fire choked Athens with ash falling from the sky. Rescue associations sought Friday to help injured animals, burned or dehydrated from the fires, bringing food, water and first aid. One organization, Caesar's Paradise, said birds, tortoises, hedgehogs and wild boar as well as cats and dogs had been found dead from the smoke and flames. The Greek NGO ANIMA said it was particularly concerned because the fires erupted "in the spring, when animals give birth to their young".
"It's difficult for newborns to run or to fly with their own wings like adults," the organization said on social media. The WWF launched a petition calling on the government to take "serious prevention measures against forest fires". Greece faces violent forest fires every summer, fanned by dry weather, strong winds and temperatures that often soar well above 30 C (86 F). These may be of natural origin, or criminal, with a view to real estate speculation, or due to negligence. In 2018, 102 people died in the coastal resort of Mati, near Athens, in Greece's worst-ever fire disaster. - AFP