Mediterranean Heatwave: Greece and Italy Devastated by Wildfires

Mediterranean Heatwave: Greece and Italy Devastated by Wildfires


A plane‌ fighting wildfires in Greece crashed,‍ killing two pilots on Tuesday, as large areas of the Mediterranean ‍sweltered⁤ under an intense summer heatwave and Algeria battled to control an​ inferno in which at ⁤least 34 people died.

The​ plane, which had been dropping water, came down on a hillside⁢ close to the town ​of Karystos on the‍ Greek island of Evia, east of Athens. The captain‍ and co-pilot,‌ aged 34 and 27, both ‍died, the air force said.

Greece has ‌been particularly hard hit by fires, with authorities evacuating more ​than 20,000 people in recent days from homes ⁣and resorts in the south of the holiday island of Rhodes.

Close⁣ to 3,000 holidaymakers had returned home by​ plane as of Tuesday, according to ‌figures⁣ from the Transport Ministry, and tour operators have cancelled upcoming‍ trips.

The⁤ fires will deal a blow to a tourist industry that is a mainstay of the Greek ‌economy. It accounts for⁤ 18 percent of gross domestic product ⁤and one in five⁤ jobs, with an even greater contribution on ‍islands such as Rhodes.

Italy also⁢ suffered a ‍twin pounding from the elements when ⁢severe storms battered‌ the north, killing a woman and a 16-year-old
Girl Scout, while‍ southern‍ regions sweltered. In the south, ​a 98-year-old man who ⁢was bedridden​ died when fire swept through
his home.

Extreme weather throughout July has caused havoc across⁤ the⁤ planet, with record temperatures in China, ‍the United States and southern Europe⁤ sparking forest‌ fires, water shortages and a rise in heat-related hospital ​admissions. The heat,⁣ with temperatures topping 40 degrees Celsius (104 ‌degrees Fahrenheit), is⁣ well in excess of what usually ⁢attracts tourists to southern European beaches.

The high​ temperatures and parched ground sparked wildfires in countries on both sides of the Mediterranean.

In North Africa, Algeria was ​fighting to contain devastating forest⁢ fires along its Mediterranean coast in a blaze ⁢that has already killed at ⁤least 34 people.⁣ Fanned by ​strong winds, fires also ‍forced​ the closure of two border ⁣crossings with neighbouring Tunisia.

Wildfires also broke⁢ out in the countryside around Syria’s Mediterranean⁤ port ‍city of ⁢Latakia, with authorities using army helicopters ⁢to try to put them out.

Scientists have described extreme heat as a “silent killer” taking ⁢a‍ heavy toll ​on​ the ⁢poor,‌ the ⁢elderly and those with pre-existing medical conditions.

Research published this⁢ month said as‍ many as 61,000 people might have died​ in ⁣Europe’s sweltering heatwaves last summer, suggesting preparedness efforts are falling fatally short.

Post⁤ from www.aljazeera.com

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