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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
National
Maryam Zakir-Hussain

All the wildfires in Europe mapped as 20 killed in Greece and hospital evacuated

AFP via Getty Images

Wildfires continue to cause chaos in Europe as firefighters in Greece and Tenerife tackle blazes in soaring heat.

Devastating blazes in central Greece left two dead and two firefighters injured on Monday, while fires consumed the city of Alexandroupolis, damaging a school, a cemetery and several homes. And on Tuesday, the bodies of 18 people were found in a forest after a fire struck an area in the north east of the country.

In a separate incident, around 65 of the more than 100 patients in the Alexandroupolis hospital in north-eastern Greece were transported to a ferry docked in the city’s port, as hot, dry and windy conditions have kept fires stoked for four days.

Wildfires have ravaged Greece this summer
— (AFP via Getty Images)

It comes as dozens more houses were damaged by another wildfire in the Kavala region, local authorities said, while a separate fire in the Evros border region was burning through woodland in a protected national park.

A new fire broke out in the Aspropyrgos area on the western fringes of the Greek capital on Tuesday morning, prompting authorities to issue evacuation orders for two villages in the area.

Romania sent 56 firefighters and Cyprus send two water-dropping aircraft to help fight the wildfire in Alexandroupolis, while French firefighters helped tackle a separate fire on the island of Evia.

Flames burn a forest during a wildfire in Avantas village, near Alexandroupolis town
— (AP)
Firefighters have battled tirelessly overnight to tame the flames
— (EPA)

Here is a map which shows where the wildfires are in Greece:

The highest fire risk level (extreme) was given by the General Secretariat of Civil Protection of the Ministry of Climate Crisis & Civil Protection for the following areas today:

  • Region of Attica
  • Region of Central Greece (PE Boeotia, PE Evia, PE Fthiotida)
  • Peloponnese Region (Argolida PE, Corinthia PE)

There is a very high fire risk for the following areas:

  • Region of Eastern Macedonia & Thrace (Evros PE including the island of Samothraki, Rodopi PE, Xanthi PE, Kavala PE, Thassos PE)
  • Region of Central Macedonia (PE Thessaloniki, PE Halkidiki, Mount Athos)
  • North Aegean Region (Lemnos PE, Lesvos PE)
  • Region of Thessaly (Magnesia PE, Sporades PE)
  • Region of Central Greece (PE of Fokidas, PE of Fthiotida, Skyros island)
  • Region of Peloponnese
  • Region of Attica (Kythira Island)
  • Region of Western Greece
  • Region of Epirus (Preveza Region, Arta Region, Thesprotia Region)
  • Region of Ionian Islands (PE Kefallonia, PE Zakynthos, PE Lefkada)
Map shows regions where there are extreme and very high fire risks today
— (Civil Protection Greece)

In Tenerife, more than 12,000 people were evacuated from their homes as a devastating blaze- which was started deliberately- burnt through about 13,400 hectares (33,000 acres) of pine forest and scrubland.

Locals were seen fleeing in horror from plumes of flames and smoke as the fire spread after it was first sparked last Tuesday.

Local residents seen extinguishing a fire in Avanta as smoke covers the air
— (AFP via Getty Images)

Fernando Clavijo, regional president of Canary Islands, said police suspected arson and have opened three lines of investigation. It has not been revealed if any arrests were made.

The fire began in the Arafo mountains around the Mount Teide volcano - Spain’s highest peak- expanding to a raging perimeter of 84 kilometers as it ravaged the north of the island over the last six days.

More than 12,000 people were evacuated from their homes in Tenerife as fires burned for at least six days
— (Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Authorities on Sunday allowed some of the 12,000 people evacuated from the villages of Arafo and Candelaria to return to their homes and the remaining evacuees could receive more good news on Monday, Clavijo said.

However, emergency services recommended residents in the area around the fire, which includes the capital Santa Cruz de Tenerife, to close windows and to stay indoors. It recommended wearing face masks if they need to go outside, as the air quality was “very unfavourable” due to smoke.

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