Roughly 19,000 people were evacuated from parts of a Greek island where wildfires broke out amid the heat wave that’s set temperature records across southern Europe.
(Bloomberg) — Roughly 19,000 people were evacuated from parts of a Greek island where wildfires broke out amid the heat wave that’s set temperature records across southern Europe.
The Greek Coast Guard led efforts to rescue tourists and locals from beaches in the Kiotari and Lardos areas of the island of Rhodes. About 3,000 people were evacuated by sea and 16,000 by land from the affected areas, a fire department spokesman said Sunday.
Tourists are now scrambling to get out of Rhodes altogether, with some still in their swimsuits sheltering in schools and hotel conference spaces, and airlines struggling to arrange enough return flights. The Greek civil protection ministry said the evacuation was the largest in the country’s history caused by a wildfire.
The blaze capped a devastating week of extreme weather across Europe, from hailstorms and a tornado in Italy, to heavy rainfall and high winds that left several dead in parts of western Balkans. Climate change triggered by fossil fuel emissions is raising the intensity and duration of summer heat waves across the Northern Hemisphere.
Read More: Europe’s Heat Wave Sparks Wildfires and Freak Storms
“For the last few days, beach goers have been watching as firefighter planes make water landings to pick up supplies,” said Bloomberg News editor Sarah Muller, who was evacuated from her hotel in Rhodes. “It’s been an eerie backdrop to people swimming or doing water sports not far off in the distance.”
The European Commission, the UK, France and Italy were among those helping assist in the firefighting and rescue efforts. Tour operators ordered their charter planes to arrive on the island empty so they can repatriate visitors who wish to leave, the state-run Athens News Agency reported. The Greek Foreign Ministry said it set up a special operation at Rhodes airport for the quick processing of travel documents.
Leisure carrier Jet2 Plc canceled all five of its flights that had been due to depart to Rhodes on Sunday, and said it would send the empty planes to the area to bring customers back to the UK.
TUI AG scrapped flights to Rhodes through July 25 and said it was sending in additional support staff for customers on the island. EasyJet Plc said that while it’s currently operating as normal to Rhodes, it’s canceled some holiday packages and is offering customers transfers.
Police in Rhodes were forced to introduce traffic diversions, with many highways closed to ensure access to Rhodes International Airport in the north of the island.
“We spent the night sleeping on the floor, using tablecloths and curtains as improvised blankets and pillows,” Tim Müller, a tourist who sheltered in a hotel conference room, told the Bild am Sonntag newspaper. “We just want to get out of here.”
Greece’s Foreign Ministry said its crisis-management unit has activated special telephone numbers that foreign visitors can call to facilitate their evacuation.
Rhodes is particularly popular with British visitors, who accounted for nearly a quarter of all international air arrivals in June, according to data from Rhodes Airport. Germans and Poles were the second and third-largest groups to arrive by air last month.
Civil protection authorities warned of very high risk of wildfires again on Sunday throughout Greece, as temperatures were expected to hit 45C (113F) in some areas.
–With assistance from Sarah Muller, Sonia Sirletti, Samuel Stolton and Chris Reiter.
(Updates with extreme weather last week in third paragraph.)
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