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ATHENS:Wildfires north of Athens leapt back to life on Thursday as searing conditions persisted and emergency crews battled blazes across Greece for a third day running.
A wall of dark smoke rose high above the Greek capital, residents fled suburbs, asylum seekers were evacuated and authorities warned of more blazes on Friday as temperatures hovered around 40 degrees Celsius (107 Fahrenheit) and gale winds were expected.
Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said emergency services faced a difficult night ahead with westerly winds set to strengthen and he urged people to comply with evacuation orders and avoid unnecessary travel.
“We are dealing with unprecedented conditions as many days of heatwave have turned the whole country into a powder keg,” he said in a special televised address.
With swathes of neighbouring Turkey also aflame, the smoke-filled skies have added to apocalyptic images of floods and fire seen across Europe this summer.
Mitsotakis said defences against the reality of climate change had to be strengthened. He said there would be time for “criticism and self-criticism” of the government’s handling of the crisis but for the moment urged citizens to remain united.
Earlier, he visited an area in the western Peloponnese near the site of the ancient Olympic Games where firefighters fought all night to save one of Greece’s best known archaeological sites.
Firefighters, backed by waterbombing fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters, had managed to control some of the blazes near Athens earlier in the day.
But the heat fanned them back into life, with flames crossing the motorway connecting Athens to northern Greece and threatening more built-up areas.
On Thursday afternoon, authorities ordered the evacuation of the suburbs of Afidnes, Kryoneri, Kokkinovrahos, Ippokrateios Politeia and Drosopigi north of Athens, as well as asylum seekers from the nearby Malakasa migrant reception centre.
More than 150 wildfires have broken out across Greece since Tuesday, destroying houses, forcing the evacuation of dozens of towns and villages and burning thousands of acres of forest land.
The Civil Protection Authority issued an “extreme fire warning” for half the country on Friday amid the heatwave.
The finance ministry announced emergency payments of up to 6,000 euros ($7,100) for people who had lost possessions and said more measures would follow.
Local utilities said there could be rolling power cuts in some parts of the Attica region around the capital due to the fire.
Access to parks and forests will be forbidden in the coming days, Deputy Citizens’ Protection Minister Nikos Hardalias said. Additional firefighters and aircraft were expected to arrive from France, Sweden and Romania.
On the island of Evia, church bells rang on Thursday to warn residents of the fires that were still burning strongly there. More than a dozen villages on the island have already been evacuated.
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(Additional reporting by Karolina TagarisWriting by Karolina TagarisEditing by Raissa Kasolowsky and Andrew Heavens)
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