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Tuesday, September 4, 2007

Anti-flooding measures; new threat caused by fires

ATHENS, Greece: Fears grew Tuesday that flooding could hit charred regions of Greece ravaged by 11 days of devastating forest fires that have left thousands homeless and villages destroyed.

Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis was to meet cabinet members in Athens Tuesday to decide additional relief measures.

Anti-flooding works were to start Tuesday on the central island of Evia after projects began Monday in the Peloponnese, to the south, concentrated around Ancient Olympia. The archaeological site survived the fires but the surrounding region was badly scorched.

They were the two regions worst hit by fires that burned up to a half-million acres of forest and farmland.

Fires were reported late Monday near Preveza, in west-central Greece, and near Epidaurus to the south. While major fires were all but out, fire officials warned that smoldering embers could easily re-ignite.

Meteorologists were predicting rain for northern and western Greece Tuesday, spreading south by Wednesday. While hopeful of wetter weather, they also feared downpours could cause flooding in fire-ravaged areas. Parts of northern Greece were hit by heavy rains and flooding on Sunday.

The wildfires in Greece also drew the attention of the European Union Monday.

In Strasbourg, France, members of the European Parliament criticized the Greek government's response to the fires and blamed land speculation and mass tourism for the devastation.

"Legal loopholes are in part responsible for these horrible fires. Property speculation must be rejected," said German Green lawmaker Elisabeth Schroedter.

MEPs called for a more efficient and coordinated fire-prevention system in Greece. The debate came as Greek Foreign Minister Dora Bakoyannis was appealing in Brussels for a more coordinated, EU-wide response mechanism for natural disasters.

Late Monday Petros Molyviatis, a former foreign minister heading up a special fire emergency fund, said Greeks had donated around €62 million euros (US$84.4 million) so far.

The government also announced Monday that more than 45,000 people suffering fire damage had received more than €165 million (US$224 million) from a compensation program launched last week, and that more than 200 people had returned funds they were not entitled to.

Archbishop Christodoulos, the head of the Orthodox Church in Greece and who is in the U.S. receiving cancer treatment, said Monday he believed arson was to blame for many of the fires.

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Greek forest fires continue to burn

Forest fires continued to burn in parts of southern Greece while the other main fronts of a series of massive fires have been extinguished, Greece's fire service said.

Fires on Mt Parnon and Mt Taygetos, in the south-eastern Peloponnese, were still burning as strong winds and dry conditions kept fire officials on high alert. Fire Department spokesman Nikos Diamandis said major fires in three other provinces of the Peloponnese had been put out.

The official death toll rose to 65 on Sunday when a seriously burned man on the island of Evia died in a hospital.

Meanwhile the government announced that urgent flood-control measures would be implemented in fire-devastated regions, mainly in the Peloponnese and on the island of Evia, and that prefabricated houses were being distributed by truck to the worst-hit areas.

After months of successive heat waves and no rain, heavy rainstorms have flooded parts of northern Greece. Rain and cooler weather were expected to move south early this week, helping firefighters in their efforts to extinguish any remaining blazes and prevent the possibility of smouldering fires rekindling. However, officials also fear that heavy rains could hamper relief efforts and lead to flooding.

Over a 10-day period, an estimated 4,000 people saw their homes destroyed by the wildfires, which also charred an estimated 469,000 acres of mostly forest and farmland and ravaged the area around the world heritage site of Ancient Olympia.

The fires have prompted a massive relief effort, although Greece's conservative government has faced strong public criticism for its allegedly slow response to the crisis. The public has also responded with massive donations of clothes, food and money.

Conservative Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis, who faces general elections on September 16, was in the southern town of Tripolis as he continued to survey fire-damaged areas, as did other political party leaders.

A gutted olive grove in the village of Artemida, southern Greece. File photo

The area around Artemida has been badly burnt by the fires

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