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Greek government faces intense criticism over fires

by Staff Writers
Athens (AFP) Aug 28, 2007
Greece's government faced a storm of criticism Tuesday for its handling of forest fires that were raging on for their fifth day, creating a national disaster that has claimed more than 60 lives.

About 25 fires were blazing, mainly on the mountainous southern peninsula of Peloponnese which has been at the centre of a crisis that began on Friday.

Hot winds were fanning the flames and testing the endurance of weary firefighters and 2,000 soldiers who have been drafted in to help.

At least 63 people have died with most of the victims engulfed by flames in isolated communities in Greece's worst catastrophe for decades, but the fire service said no villages were endangered on Tuesday.

Fire-fighting planes lent by more than a dozen countries to help the Greek authorities dumped water on the burning forests.

Nerves already frayed by the national disaster were stretched further when an earthquake measuring 5.0 on the Richter scale shook central Peloponnese.

The government has blamed arsonists for the fires, but the opposition Socialists said Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis was attempting to deflect criticism ahead of next month's general election.

"We are humiliated by the inability of the government to save the lives of our fellow citizens," Socialist leader George Papandreou said, dismissing the allegations of arson as "dangerous".

"When the prime minister adopts such theories, it is dangerous for the democratic institutions of a country," Papandreou said.

Karamanlis, whose conservatives are tipped to win the election on September 16, went on the offensive.

He called on Greeks to pull together and promised that gutted homes would be rebuilt and forests re-planted, saying: "We must do everything possible to prevent young people from become disillusioned and leaving their villages."

Seven people have been charged with arson and police were looking for evidence of further cases of fires being started in forests which are highly flammable following two months of intense heat.

Conspiracy theories swirled around the media, but one possible motive could be that the fires were started to clear land for illegal construction.

A new front in the fight against the fires opened late Tuesday when flames began to tear through pine forest near Marathon to the north of Athens.

Six planes, a helicopter and 13 fire trucks headed to the area and the fire was contained as darkness fell, a fire service spokesman said.

Firefighters also rushed to tackle fires on Evia, the island north of Athens where four people have lost their lives, and in western Greece.

Meanwhile, elderly Greeks evacuated from their villages said they feared they had lost everything.

Iannoula Iannopoulos, 77, was forced to hastily leave her home in Phalaisia in western Peloponnese -- almost the first time she had ventured outside the tiny village in her life.

"There are just 30 people living there and we are all old. What could we do against the flames? We wanted our children to come and help, but the roads were blocked," she told AFP in a hotel in the town of Sparta where villagers were taken by rescuers on Sunday.

Farmers who scratch a living from olive groves and a few animals were counting the cost of the devastation.

Alexander Georgorlias, 73, from the Peloponnese village of Andritsaina, threw chickens killed in the fires into a ravine.

"The Turks, Italians and Germans combined didn't do as much damage as this," he said, referring to invading armies that had pillaged Greece.

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