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Thursday, September 6, 2007

Fire-damaged Olympia to be reforested

ATHENS (AFP) — The Greek Olympic Committee said Wednesday it had accepted an offer from Israel for experts and 10,000 trees to help repair damage caused by fires on Olympia, the birthplace of the ancient Olympic Games.

Greece's President Karolos Papoulias also accepted a proposal from the German city of Munich to reforest the Cronius hill above Olympia which was sacred to ancient Greeks.

Singed by a 12-day fire inferno that killed 65 people around the country, Olympia needs to spruce up ahead of the lighting ceremony of the Olympic flame for the 2008 Games in Beijing.

"(There is) an international effort to restore beauty to the landscape of ancient Olympia ahead of the lighting ceremony in March," the Olympic committee said.

The blaze burned trees behind the Olympia archaeological museum and grass on the slopes of the ancient stadium where thousands attend the lighting ceremony of the torch for the Summer and Winter Games.

Extensive damage was also caused to the Olympic Academy grove where the heart of Pierre de Coubertin, the founder of the modern Olympics, is buried.

Olympia is a UNESCO world heritage site and the birthplace of the ancient Olympic Games, first recorded to have been held here in 776 BC until 393 AD.

The local archaeological site still contains the remains of the stadium, temples, administrative buildings and training halls.

Signifying the spiritual moment of the Games' launch, the Olympic flame has been an integral part of the competition since 1928, and the ceremony conducted every two years in Olympia by young women dressed as ancient Greek priestesses is an eagerly-anticipated element of every Olympics.


After battling to extinguish the worst wildfires on record, Greek officials are battling to light a new fire, the Olympic flame that will be carried from the birthplace of the ancient games to Beijing for next year’s Olympics.

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Monday, September 3, 2007

Aid arrives to help Greece after fires

By JOHN F.L. ROSS, Associated Press

ATHENS, Greece - More international aid arrived Monday in support of massive cleanup and reconstruction efforts in Ancient Olympia and other fire-stricken parts of southern Greece.

The U.S. Embassy in Athens said a six-member team of disaster-relief experts had arrived, including specialists from the U.S. Agency for International Development and the U.S. Forest Service‘s top firefighter.

Greece‘s Finance Ministry said the European Investment Bank was making a $135 million long-term loan to Greece for reconstruction, with more to come.

Fires continued to burn Monday in the southeastern Peloponnese region.

Officials now fear that downpours could cause flooding and hamper relief efforts in fire-stricken areas.

"The state‘s obligation does not stop with the measures we have taken for the relief of our fellow citizens and the fire-hit regions," Karamanlis said in the southern town of Tripolis.

The government said urgent flood-control measures were under way in fire-devastated regions, and that prefabricated houses were being distributed to people whose houses were burned.


The winged statue of victory stands in front of smoke from fires in the village of ancient Olympia, near the birthplace of the Olympic games, in south-west Greece. A huge effort by firefighters, water-dropping aircraft and fire trucks succeeded in keeping a raging blaze away from the 2,800-year-old site - the holiest sanctuary in ancient Greece
Photograph: Petros Giannakouris/AP

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