The Japan Times - Greeks count cost of wildfire 'tragedy' near Athens

EUR -
AED 4.342194
AFN 76.852816
ALL 96.530759
AMD 446.007327
ANG 2.116509
AOA 1084.218673
ARS 1708.516422
AUD 1.684735
AWG 2.131194
AZN 1.999946
BAM 1.955402
BBD 2.373527
BDT 144.020684
BGN 1.985611
BHD 0.445715
BIF 3491.918741
BMD 1.182354
BND 1.497995
BOB 8.143342
BRL 6.194825
BSD 1.178465
BTN 106.473877
BWP 16.277755
BYN 3.376527
BYR 23174.144818
BZD 2.370128
CAD 1.61373
CDF 2601.179459
CHF 0.917204
CLF 0.025768
CLP 1017.463332
CNY 8.20341
CNH 8.196792
COP 4311.963467
CRC 585.303136
CUC 1.182354
CUP 31.33239
CVE 110.242094
CZK 24.342664
DJF 209.85817
DKK 7.468719
DOP 74.207719
DZD 153.521617
EGP 55.547238
ERN 17.735315
ETB 182.806147
FJD 2.60035
FKP 0.866064
GBP 0.862823
GEL 3.186419
GGP 0.866064
GHS 12.910372
GIP 0.866064
GMD 86.31144
GNF 10339.28891
GTQ 9.039122
GYD 246.549814
HKD 9.240158
HNL 31.136847
HRK 7.535494
HTG 154.578535
HUF 380.871748
IDR 19828.850602
ILS 3.644034
IMP 0.866064
INR 106.904163
IQD 1543.792284
IRR 49806.67623
ISK 144.9923
JEP 0.866064
JMD 184.689435
JOD 0.838276
JPY 184.767103
KES 151.968261
KGS 103.396805
KHR 4754.971784
KMF 494.223854
KPW 1064.103817
KRW 1717.860366
KWD 0.363172
KYD 0.9821
KZT 590.832232
LAK 25348.840151
LBP 105532.664721
LKR 364.765751
LRD 219.193528
LSL 18.875558
LTL 3.491185
LVL 0.715194
LYD 7.450515
MAD 10.8101
MDL 19.956938
MGA 5222.958935
MKD 61.627456
MMK 2483.085887
MNT 4219.147567
MOP 9.48361
MRU 47.046214
MUR 54.258114
MVR 18.267441
MWK 2043.492681
MXN 20.374862
MYR 4.641909
MZN 75.375066
NAD 18.875638
NGN 1641.2847
NIO 43.371538
NOK 11.386728
NPR 170.365805
NZD 1.9599
OMR 0.454635
PAB 1.17846
PEN 3.967292
PGK 5.049164
PHP 69.726392
PKR 329.590704
PLN 4.224717
PYG 7818.441591
QAR 4.28521
RON 5.094886
RSD 117.380557
RUB 91.041263
RWF 1720.015348
SAR 4.433847
SBD 9.527531
SCR 16.379389
SDG 711.183042
SEK 10.520222
SGD 1.502536
SHP 0.887072
SLE 28.938098
SLL 24793.378203
SOS 672.388724
SRD 45.064847
STD 24472.347414
STN 24.495946
SVC 10.311901
SYP 13076.336237
SZL 18.882236
THB 37.344646
TJS 11.012765
TMT 4.150064
TND 3.407792
TOP 2.846825
TRY 51.43233
TTD 7.982409
TWD 37.341703
TZS 3055.250699
UAH 51.000234
UGX 4201.144842
USD 1.182354
UYU 45.390377
UZS 14427.063318
VES 439.41083
VND 30712.83601
VUV 141.335778
WST 3.223472
XAF 655.848461
XAG 0.013642
XAU 0.000234
XCD 3.195372
XCG 2.123877
XDR 0.815637
XOF 655.826278
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.843715
ZAR 18.87258
ZMK 10642.611403
ZMW 23.12739
ZWL 380.717611
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.1400

    23.94

    -0.58%

  • RBGPF

    -2.1000

    82.1

    -2.56%

  • BTI

    0.8800

    61.87

    +1.42%

  • RYCEF

    0.2600

    16.93

    +1.54%

  • CMSC

    -0.0900

    23.66

    -0.38%

  • NGG

    1.6200

    86.23

    +1.88%

  • RIO

    3.8500

    96.37

    +4%

  • GSK

    0.8700

    53.34

    +1.63%

  • BCE

    0.2700

    26.1

    +1.03%

  • VOD

    0.3400

    15.25

    +2.23%

  • BCC

    3.1800

    84.93

    +3.74%

  • BP

    1.1200

    38.82

    +2.89%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    13.12

    -0.23%

  • AZN

    -4.0900

    184.32

    -2.22%

  • RELX

    -5.0200

    30.51

    -16.45%

Greeks count cost of wildfire 'tragedy' near Athens
Greeks count cost of wildfire 'tragedy' near Athens / Photo: Aris MESSINIS - AFP

Greeks count cost of wildfire 'tragedy' near Athens

In the municipality of Palaia Fokaia, an hour's drive south of Athens, a typical bucolic Greek landscape of olive groves and hamlets was transformed by a raging Friday wildfire into a dystopia of blackened land and incinerated homes.

Text size:

A howling wind ripped through the settlement on Saturday, spread dust and the bitter smell of ash coming from the surrounding hills, where fires and smouldering embers continued to burn.

The ground shuddered as low-flying helicopters and water bombers weaved through the steep terrain to release water onto the remaining blazes and retrieve sea water.

Hours earlier, over 200 firefighters had battled to keep the fire that erupted in the rural region of Keratea, some 43 kilometres (27 miles) southeast of Athens, from threatening the coastal resorts dotting the coast of Attica.

At one gutted home -- its caved-in roof nothing more than a tangle of warped metal -- mask-wearing residents returned to retrieve whatever belongings survived the inferno.

A despondent woman named Dimitria was more fortunate: the flames spared her home but razed the nearest forest, leaving it a desolate terrain of roasted trees and ash.

"From yesterday night, there were very few reinforcements from the fire brigade," she lamented, describing how help arrived after the advancing fire threatened "many houses" near the forest.

"My house is OK, but my forest is burned. And that is the pity," she said with a trembling voice, her eyes welling up as she left to survey the damage.

Firefighters with hoses combed through a copse of trees to douse any embers and prevent reactivations, scorched twigs and debris crunching under their boots.

- 'We knew it was dangerous' -

Observing them from his unscathed house was a relieved Kostas Triadis.

Despite the damage dealt to the landscape, he hailed the work of firemen and volunteers, "otherwise it would be very bad."

"It is regenerated by itself, I hope it will be the natural future," the 75-year-old added, referring to the devastated vegetation.

"It is a very good, small forest, we always knew it was dangerous."

His wife Eleni, 71, added that "everybody did their utmost to save the area, but the real tragedy is that the forest is lost. It was very old."

But she pointed to the many trees that were relatively unharmed because the fire burned itself out quickly in the short grass that residents had cut in June.

"It's a tragedy, it's the first time the fire has come here," she said of the area, where the couple spend the summer months away from their Athens residence.

A short distance away on the coast, the contrast could not be starker: beachgoers ambled on the sand and swam in the shimmering Mediterranean on a seemingly normal balmy summer morning.

But the signs of the emergency were unmistakeable as beachside diners were greeted with the spectacle of water bombers skimming the water to refill and return to the raging fires.

K.Yoshida--JT