INTL Greece wildfires kill over 70, including 26 huddled near beach outside of Athens

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/worl...-outside-of-athens/ar-AAAl3ng?ocid=spartandhp

Greece wildfires kill over 70, including 26 huddled near beach outside of Athens

Travis Fedschun 1 hr ago

Video

A firestorm that swept through a seaside resort town near the Greek capital killed at least 70 people, including families with children found clasped in a last embrace near a beach as they tried to flee the flames, officials said.

The two largest wildfires — one 20 miles northeast of Athens near Rafina, the other 30 miles west of the capital in Kineta — broke out Monday during hot, dry summer conditions.

Fanned by gale-force winds that frequently changed direction, the flames spread rapidly into populated seaside towns — too fast for many who were in their cars or homes to flee, fire department spokeswoman Stavroula Malliri said. The Greek fire brigade said the death toll has risen to 74 as of Tuesday.

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras declared a three-day national mourning period for those killed in the wildfires, Sky News reported.

"The country is going through an unspeakable tragedy," he said. "Today, Greece is mourning and we are declaring three days of national mourning in the memory of those who perished."

In the seaside town of Mati, rescue workers found the bodies of 26 people huddled together near a beach, Reuters reported.

“They had tried to find an escape route but unfortunately these people and their kids didn’t make it in time. Instinctively, seeing the end nearing, they embraced,” Nikos Economopoulos, the head of Greece’s Red Cross, told Skai TV. The group was found near several burned out cars close to a walled compound, also gutted by the fire.

Authorities evacuated more than 700 people by sea overnight as tourists and residents headed to coastal areas for help, said Merchant Marine deputy minister Nektarios Santorinios, whose ministry is in charge of the coast guard.

The mayor of nearby Rafina, Evangelos Bournous, told Reuters the death toll had reached at least 60.

"Everything happened in seconds," said Andreaas Passios, who lives next to the compound. "I grabbed a beach towel. It saved my life. I soaked it, grabbed my wife and we ran to the sea."

Passios said he and his wife stayed by the sea for two hours: "It was unbelievable. Gas canisters were exploding. Burning pine cones were flying everywhere."

A Polish woman and her son were among 10 people who drowned when their boat capsized during an evacuation, according to a travel agent in Poland.

Janusz Smigielski, deputy head of the company Grecos, told the AP the pair were on holiday in the resort of Mati, east of Athens. Greek water police were evacuating a hotel at the time and leading 45 people to boats when one of the vessels capsized, killing all 10 passengers.

The European Union's Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid Operations posted a satellite photo on Twitter showing the extent of the fires.

Another survivor spoke of the "indescribable" wind that caused the fire to spread as he fled from his summer home in Mati.

Nikos Stavrinidis, one of those who went into the sea for safety but was swept away, was rescued by an Egyptian crew on a fishing boat after about two hours in the water. Stavrinidis told the AP that not all of those who fled with him survived.

"The fire appeared very quickly. The wind was indescribable, it was incredible. I've never seen anything like this before in my life," he said.

"We fell into the sea and tried to distance ourselves, to get away from the carbon dioxide ... but as we went further, there was a lot of wind and a lot of current and it started taking us away from the coast. We were not able to see where we were."

The strong winds made it hard for firefighters to tackle the fires in the area while making conditions in the sea increasingly dangerous.

"What upsets me and what I will carry in my heart is that it is terrible to see the person next to you drowning and not being able to help him," he added. "You can't. That's the only tragic thing — that will stay with me."

Rafina's dock became a makeshift hospital during the night as paramedics checked survivors, some of them clad in only their bathing suits, emerging from coast guard vessels and private boats. The fire department said 156 adults and 16 children were hospitalized with injuries. Eleven of the adults were in serious condition.

Slideshow by Reuters

In all, 47 brush and forest fires broke out across Greece Monday and early Tuesday, with most of them quickly extinguished, the fire department said. Ten were still burning late Tuesday morning, including blazes in Corinth, Crete, and in central and northern Greece.

More than 400 firefighters and volunteer firefighters were battling the two fires near Athens, supported by seven water-dropping helicopters and three aircraft.

Greece sought international help through the European Union. Spain was sending two firefighting aircraft while Cyprus was sending in 60 firefighters. Israel and Turkey both also offered assistance.

It was the deadliest fire season to hit Greece in more than a decade. More than 60 people were killed in 2007 when huge fires swept across the southern Peloponnese region.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.
 

Dosadi

Brown Coat
um, if they are near a beach, why didn't they either get on a boat, or just stand in the water?
 

jazzy

Advocate Discernment
they tried. he said they fell intop the sea and thw current started carrying them away, so much smoke they could hardly breathe and they couldnet see whaere they were or where they were going. some drowned, some got picked up by fishermen.
must have been horrifying
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
um, if they are near a beach, why didn't they either get on a boat, or just stand in the water?

Hundreds of people were rescued from the sea, so were a number of bodies - this came on really fast, many couldn't make it to the shore or into the water.

This is pretty much the big story of the day over here, and it keeps getting worse as they find more bodies, was at 74 last I checked with hundreds of injuries.

We have a friend who has a similar resort (she inherited the family home with her Welsh husband a few years back) but they are up in the mountains and I haven't heard of them being affected, but I am paying attention.
 

Snyper

Veteran Member
High winds and dry conditions can spread fires a long way and do it so rapidly it might appear many were set near the same time.

If the new fires started upwind arson would be more likely.
 

SAPPHIRE

Veteran Member
wow...….awful event and so horrifying for victims/families...……...lots of sudden destructions everywhere...…..
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
My friend in Greece just reported in, she and family are fine; they are having a rather crazy week but otherwise OK and I gather not in danger or near it at this time.
 

NC Susan

Deceased
My friend in Greece just reported in, she and family are fine; they are having a rather crazy week but otherwise OK and I gather not in danger or near it at this time.


Do you know How many Muslims refugees does Greece have near those shores ?
 

compchyk

The Computer Chyck
I spent my childhood summers at the south of Italy (Calabria, the toe of the boot) that part of the world gets the weather systems from Africa, dry heat and wind. I remember wildfires almost every summer due to these weather systems however 1 year the fires were close to the major cities of the south, it was learned later they were courtesy of the mafia who wanted to redevelop. Half/Half may be the weather as I remember or may be set. For the 3 months I'd be there it would rain maybe for 15 mins on 1 corner on 1 day.,,,
 

Countrymouse

Country exile in the city

Found this article through your link, mxkitty--

also some videos, as well as many pictures--including this one:

0_TOPSHOT-GREECE-FIRE.jpg



that's the Parthenon, under a broiling orange sky..........

Article:

https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/greece-fire-live-athens-forest-12970444

Greece fires recap: Apocalyptic inferno leaves at least 60 dead with 26 bodies found on Mati beach

Wildfires raging near Athens have killed at least 60 people and there are fears the death toll could rise even higher as crews tackle the infernos.

Flames have almost completely destroyed villages and trapped tourists and families on smoke-covered beaches, where they waited for boats to rescue them.

One fire ravaged the village of Mati, killing at least 26 people, in the country's worst wildfire in over a decade.

Rescuers described a tragic scene as victims were found tightly huddled in a field about 30 metres (100ft) from the beach.

Emergency crews found the group, some of them youngsters, lying close together near the top of a cliff overlooking a beach.

Nikos Economopoulos, head of Greece's Red Cross, told Skai TV: "I was briefed by a rescuer that he saw the shocking picture of 26 people tightly huddled in a field some 30 metres from the beach."

Greece has appealed for emergency aid from the EU as it tries to bring the fires under control and protect towns from total devastation.

Follow our live blog for updates.
Key Events

Death toll rises to 60
10:59
Regional authorities declare state of emergency
08:56
Bodies found huddled together and hugging each other
08:45
Youngest victim thought to be baby aged six months
08:43
Apocalyptic scenes as more victims found
08:19

14:43
Polish mother and son among 10 who drowned after fleeing the flames

A Polish mother and her son died after they ran into the water while trying to escape the flames.

The pair were among 10 who drowned when their boat capsized.

A travel agent in Poland says the vessel overturned during the evacuation, reports Sky News.

Janusz Smigielski, deputy head of the company Grecos, said they were on holiday in Mati.

He said Greek water police evacuated a hotel and led 45 people to boats. However, he said one of them capsized, killing 10 people.
A Polish woman and her son drowned when their boat capsized as they were trying to escape the inferno (file photo) (Image: REUTERS)
14:06
Mayor says death toll will rise as at least 1,000 buildings were destroyed

Mayor Vangelis Bournos of the Rafina-Pikermi district has said he hopes the death toll doesn’t rise to three digits following the devastating wildfires.

At least 1,000 buildings and 300 cars have been destroyed in the inferno.

He said “There are more dead people than announced, I can confirm that. The destruction is biblical. More than a thousand buildings have been burned.

“I am really worried, I don’t want to imagine we have so many dead. I hope that we won’t reach a three digit number.

“How can you search a thousand houses? The fire was out of control due to the strong winds and reached the sea within half an hour.

“We limited the damage but we couldn’t prevent it. Fifty percent of the beach are of Kokkino Limanaki has been burnt, Mati by 98 per cent. My own house got burnt and my family was in danger. My cars were burnt. The situation is out of control.”
Mayor Vangelis Bournos fears the death toll could rise to three digits (Image: REX/Shutterstock)
At least 300 cars were destroyed in the inferno (Image: REX/Shutterstock)
13:47
More pictures show scale of devastation in Mati

More pictures are continuing to emerge which show the scale of the devastation in Mati.

Countless houses, cars and stretches of land have been left scorched by the inferno.

One poignant image shows a woman surveying a road filled with burnt out cars.
A local walks on a burnt slope following the wildfire (Image: REUTERS)
A burnt out car in Mati (Image: Photoshot/Avalon.red)
A woman surveys the devastation (Image: REUTERS)
A firefighting plane about to reload as it battles the flames (Image: REUTERS)
13:37
Countries rally to help Greece

Numerous EU countries have rallied behind Greece offering help as they tackles numerous wildfires which have left at least 60 people dead.

EU President, Donald Tusk, tweeted: “Very saddened by the tragic forest fires in Greece. Europe will stand by our Greek friends in these difficult times. Help is on its way from several EU countries”.

Cyprus and Spain are sending firefighters and emergency personnel to help.

Croatia have also offered two firefighting planes.

Damir Krsticevic, Croatia’s defence secretary, said the planes were being prepared so they are ready to be deployed to Greece if needed.
12:21
Three days of national mourning declared

Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras has declared three days of national mourning for those killed in the devastating wildfires that killed at least 60 people in towns near Athens.

“The country is going through an unspeakable tragedy,” he said in a televised address.
“Today, Greece is mourning and we are declaring three days of national mourning in the memory of those who perished.”

He added that “nothing and no one will be forgotten” and promised that citizens would get the assistance of the state.”

Tspiras continued: “There are no words to describe the feelings of all of us, these times. The country lives an untold tragedy.

“Dozens of human lives have been lost. And that is unbearable for everyone and everyone. More for families who lost their loved ones.

“But also for those of us who are in positions of responsibility. For those who understand that there is nothing more valuable than human life.”

“I want to commit, that: Nothing and no one will be forgotten. Nothing and no one will leave without the help of the State helpless.

“But nothing will be left without answers. Finally, I would like to warmly thank all the foreign leaders who have been expressing their solidarity and offer their help. Greece is going through one of the toughest moments.

“We thank them for their thoughts next to us. With unity and faith in the forces, we will stand upright.”
The Prime Minister has declared three days of mourning (Image: REX/Shutterstock)
11:35
Danish tourists have been found

Local media reported this morning that 10 Danish tourists boarded a boat from the beach in Rafina to try and escape the inferno.

Six patrol boats, a lifeguard, an anti-pollution craft, an offshore vessel with two inflatable boats, a cruise ship, a helicopter and some other vessels were involved in the search for survivors.

Danish radio have since reported that the tourists have been accounted for, including the two who were initially reported missing.
People fled to the beach for safety and were picked up by rescue boats (Image: REX/Shutterstock)
10:59
KEY EVENT
Death toll rises to 60

The mayor Rafina, Evangelos Bournous told local television that the death toll continues to rise as the Red Cross search for survivors.

He said: “The number of dead is rising, it has already exceeded 60.”

Bournous added that he believes the number will rise to 80.

One victim was found dead in a car while another was discovered beneath a vehicle.

Two people died on a motorbike in what appeared to be a traffic queue heading to the safety at a nearby beach.
The death toll has risen to 60 (Image: REX/Shutterstock)
Firefighters search a burnt house in Neo Voutza, northeast Attica, (Image: REX/Shutterstock)
Emergency services are still searching for survivors (Image: REX/Shutterstock)
10:49
Travel advice for Brits heading to Greece

There is currently no advice suggesting that Brits should avoid travelling to Greece following the wildfires.

If you have any doubts or concerns, contact your tour operator or airline before you travel.

So far easyJet, Ryanair and British Airways have not reported any cancellations or delays as a result of the wildfires.

Air traffic controllers did report some flights, mainly landing, were disrupted on Monday due to low visibility and diverted but it appears there are no further delays at present.

Click here to read more.
There is currently no advice telling Brits not to travel to Greece (Image: AFP)
10:08
View of the fire from space

A picture tweeted by World Meteorological Organisation shows the scale of the fire in Kineta, to the west of Athens.

The image shows smoke billowing from the raging fire.

Stavroula Malliri, a spokeswoman for Greece’s fire department, said 156 adults and 16 children were taken to hospital and 11 remain in a serious condition.

She said strong winds fanned the flames which caused it to spread quickly, leaving many trapped in their homes and cars.
10:05
Survivor says inferno was 'like Pompei'

A survivor of the wildfire in Mati has compared the inferno to the eruption of Pompei.

Kostas Laganos told Sky News he escaped the flames by running to the beach.

He said: “Thankfully the sea was there and we went into the sea because the flames were chasing us all the way to the water.

“It burned our backs and we dove into the water.

“It reminded me of the eruption at Pompeii, exactly that.

“I said ‘my god, we must run to save ourselves and nothing else’. Terrible.”
One Mati resident said the fire reminded him of the eruption of Pompei (Image: AFP)
09:48
Sky over Athens turns orange as minister labels fire 'biblical disaster'

The sky over Athens has turned orange as the wildfires continue to rage in the nearby villages of Mati and Kineta.

One image shows a bright orange cloud above the Parthenon temple on the Acropolis hill in the Greek capital.

Greek interior minister Panos Skourletis described the apocalyptic inferno as a “biblical disaster with human losses”.

Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras announced that “all emergency forces have been mobilised”.

The Red Cross continue to search through razed house in the search for any survivors as almost 200 people remain missing.
The sky has turned orange above the Parthenon temple on the Acropolis hill in the Greek capital (Image: AFP)
The sky has turned orange as firefighters continue to battle the wildfires (Image: AFP)
Emergency vehicles drive through the orange haze (Image: AFP)
09:22
Shocking pictures show burnt out cars as people fled Mati

Shocking images show the scale of the destruction as burnt out cars fill the roads around the village of Mati.

The main Athens-Corinth motorway, one of two road routes to the Peloponnese peninsula, was shut and train services were cancelled today as firefighters continued to battle the blaze.

A Reuters photographer saw at least four dead on a narrow road clogged with cars heading to a nearby beach and heard reports of several more casualties.

“Residents and visitors in the area did not escape in time even though they were a few metres from the sea or in their homes,” fire brigade spokeswoman Stavroula Maliri said.

Around 700 people were rescued by the coastguard and other boats at the beach with many being treated for their injuries at the dock.
Burnt out cars line the streets in Mati (Image: REX/Shutterstock)
A witness told Reuters they saw at least four people dead on a narrow road clogged with cars heading to the safe haven of a nearby beach (Image: REX/Shutterstock)
08:56
KEY EVENT
Regional authorities declare state of emergency

Regional authorities have declared a state of emergency has they struggle to control the blaze.

More than 600 firefighters and 300 vehicles are battling the inferno while Cyprus are sending a team of 60 firefighters and four nurses and rescuers aboard a Hellenic Air Force C130.

Spain has also offered assistance and Greece appealed to fellow European Union countries for help.

“This is an extreme situation,” said senior firefighter Achilleas Tzouvaras.

“People should leave, close up their homes and just leave. People cannot tolerate so much smoke for so many hours.”
Regional states have declared a state of emergency (Image: Splash News)
08:45
KEY EVENT
Bodies found huddled together and hugging each other

Horrified Greek Red Cross officials found 26 bodies huddled together and hugging each other in a villa in Mati as the death toll from the raging inferno continues to rise.

The charity confirmed at least 49 people have been killed and 156 have been injured in the apocalyptic blaze in the coastal town near Athens.

Officials found the bodies, believed to be families, in the yard of one villa in the now destroyed village.
26 bodies were found in the yard of one villa in Mati (Image: Xinhua / Barcroft Media)
08:43
KEY EVENT
Youngest victim thought to be baby aged six months

One of the youngest victims of the wildfires was thought to be a six-month-old baby who died of smoke inhalation.

At least 26 people have been killed in the village of Mati.

Three women and a child were pulled from the sea after they drowned trying to escape.

In total, coastguard and other vessels rescued 696 people who had fled to beaches. Boats plucked another 19 people from the sea.
 

ainitfunny

Saved, to glorify God.
um, if they are near a beach, why didn't they either get on a boat, or just stand in the water?

THEY DID. https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/worl...ash-ended-in-death/ar-AAAn87y?ocid=spartandhp
AAAmFCH.img


This is what happened to people FLEEING the fire, right in the middle of town! The wind kept CHANGING DIRECTION so you did not know which way to run from the approaching flames!

AAAmbtT.img


The shoreline is DOWN FROM THE TOWN (above the shore) and you had to find a WAY DOWN TO THE BEACH, in your smoke clouded vision to escape!!
26 men, women and children gathered in the hope that they could find the narrow path leading to a small staircase down to the water.

The gated entrance stood only a dozen paces away, but with smoke blotting their vision and choking their lungs, they appear to have lost their way. Officials found their bodies the next day, Tuesday; several were still clinging to one another.
 
Last edited:

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Another check in from our friend in Greece - she is posting on Facebook to keep us all updated as she said before; she and her family are fine and not affected directly but she said there was a lot of rain this year which means there is a lot of water to fight fires with, but also more vegetation around to catch fire.

Local story: a couple on their honeymoon who are from Ireland were separated during the firestorm - the families think he got her to safety and then was rescuing others; she is in bad condition in the hospital and he is missing (unless a miracle dead).

So far the confirmed death toll is EIGHTY people with much more missing, the Prime Minister has declared three days of mourning, this is turning out to be one of the larger disasters in Greece in recent memory; especially since it is not war-related or an earthquake.
 

EYW

Veteran Member
That is seriously being looked at per the press reports, yes there is a very high fire danger but all at once is very suspicious.

If I wanted to use arson as a terrorist act, then I would wait until the perfect fire danger scenario -- a lot more bang for my buck. I know this was discussed in the AlQuada magazine. Being from SoCali, I know how bad the forest fires can be, but, quite honestly, I have looked at a lot of the recent fires with a skeptical eye. Not all, but I believe some have been set as a terrorist act.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
If I wanted to use arson as a terrorist act, then I would wait until the perfect fire danger scenario -- a lot more bang for my buck. I know this was discussed in the AlQuada magazine. Being from SoCali, I know how bad the forest fires can be, but, quite honestly, I have looked at a lot of the recent fires with a skeptical eye. Not all, but I believe some have been set as a terrorist act.

Would not be a terribly large surprise and in Greece these days you have not only Jihadis (the most likely candidates) but several other potential bad actors as well; though if it is terrorism, in this case, jihadis are the most likely.

Husband of Irish couple has been found dead, very-very sad as it is for many other families today.
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
Arson suspected in devastating Greece fires that killed at least 79 people

By Ian Pannell
Bill Hutchinson
ABC News

July 25, 2018, 2:06 PM ET

As rescue crews searched for victims Wednesday in the widespread rubble from wildfires that devastated Greece and killed at least 79 people, officials investigated whether arsonists started the blazes.

Multiple fires in different areas outside the capital of Athens seemed to ignite at once, leading investigators to probe whether they were deliberately set.

"Fifteen fires were started simultaneously on three different fronts in Athens," government spokesman Dimitris Tzanakopoulos told reporters
.

He said the Greek government has requested drones from the United States to "detect any suspicious activity."

The fires exploded Monday afternoon in the forests near the seaside towns outside Athens. Fanned by winds of up to 60 miles per hour and fueled by parched vegetation,

flames quickly grew into infernos that swept across the region, leveling homes, trapping victims and prompting thousands of people to flee for their lives.

The death toll climbed to 79 people and nearly 200 were injured, the government fire service said in a report Wednesday.

More than 1,000 homes and 300 vehicles were either destroyed or damaged by the fires, officials said.

It was the worst wildfire to hit Greece since August 2007, when fires erupted in the outskirts of Athens, killing 67 people.

A rainstorm overnight and into Wednesday morning in areas ravaged by the fires helped firefighters bring the blazes under control, officials said.

The fires reduced many homes in the resort villages of Mati, Rafina, Neos Voutzas and Kokkino Limanaki to rubble and ash.

Evangelos Bournous, the mayor of Rafina, told reporters that his village "no longer exists."

Many residents tried to the outrun the rapidly advancing flames either in cars or on foot. Roadways were clogged with charred vehicles that people abandoned or got trapped inside of and died.

In Mati, firefighters recovered the bodies of 26 people, including children, found huddled together in a burned villa, officials said.

Near one home, the burned carcass of a dog laid near a path leading to the water.

"Everything burned. Everything was on fire, everything," a woman who survived the inferno in Mati told ABC News.

Nikos Stavrinidis told ABC News that he and his wife, Efi, who were at their summer home in Mati when the fire struck. They initially tried to evacuate in their car only to get stuck in a traffic jam. He said he and his wife turned around, ditched their car near a beach and jumped into the sea to escape flames and blinding smoke.

He said he and his wife tread water for several hours before they were rescued by a fishing crew.

"You don't see anything, nothing, nothing, nothing, only black," Stavrinidis told ABC News, describing how thick the smoke was. "No lights, no stars.... nothing. After 10 o’clock, after three hours in the sea, it was possible to see the moon and we could see the moon move."

His wife, Efi, added: "We are very lucky to be alive."

The couple said they met other evacuees in the sea. They said after about an hour, they became part of a group of eight people in the water.

Two of the people in the group eventually drowned, Stavrinidis said.

"The thing that haunts me most and will follow me the rest of my life is the fact that two people drowned,” he said.

https://abcnews.go.com/Internationa...eece-fires-killed-79-people/story?id=56807876
 

night driver

ESFP adrift in INTJ sea
I spent my childhood summers at the south of Italy (Calabria, the toe of the boot) that part of the world gets the weather systems from Africa, dry heat and wind.

I would NEVER have tagged you as Calabraise.

Now Abrutz....



<G><D><R><keepin my head down!!>
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Picture from the last article I posted
- picture of the cat

This is why if running from a firestorm if you can't find your cats, leave the doors open (or at least the front door) and pray; because sometimes cats will make it!

I hope someone takes this fur baby in and cares for him until either his people are found or he can be given a good home; one cat was found something like five years after the Oakland Hills Firestorm; this kitty could also have burns on its feet though since the ears are OK it may be fine but waiting in the space where his home was, waiting for his people.

While human and animal death in the macro is always tragic, stories like the bridegroom who died trying to save others from Ireland (all over the papers today) or this lone kitty probably waiting in the ruins of his former home are what make such macro tragic events more human to us.
 

naturallysweet

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Those who haven't escaped a fire, really have no clue. The smoke is the killer. The smoke is hot and dark, and scalds whatever it touched.
 

mzkitty

I give up.
Of course. I heard this morning that one of the CA fires was arson and the guy was arrested.

Kill them.



BreakingNNow
‏ @BreakingNNow
8m8 minutes ago

#BREAKING: Authorities in Greece have said that there are "serious indications" that the wildfires was started by arson.
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
Pakistani migrant arrested for trying to set fire in Greece

By Ilias
Voice of Europe
27 July 2018

A Pakistani migrant was arrested for trying to set fire near the military camp of Perama on Wednesday. The arrest has been confirmed by the local police.

Perama is an area with a high concentration of refugees. The migrant was arrested and interrogated after being charged and prosecuted with arson. Local police confirmed to our reporter that a Pakistani migrant has been arrested in the area.

The first information of the Local webpage epirus gate says that the perpetrator denies all charges and was just ‘working in the area’.

The heat of the Greek summer and the strong blowing winds could lead to a massive destruction as the military camp of Perama houses military equipment.

Civil Protection Minister Nikos Toskas told at a press conference that arson is a serious possibility. “We have serious indications and significant signs suggesting the criminal actions of arson,” he said.

It’s not the first time that migrants have started fires, with several cases of arson having been filed in the Moria migrant camp in lesbos.

As hundreds of thousands of migrants came to Europe, there are numerous terrorists and radicals among them as well.

ISIS already called on its recruits to use arson as a weapon against a country. The method is used in Israel as well and according to ISIS it can “impose terror on an entire country”.


The arrest of the Pakistani migrant comes only hours after the national tragedy that struck Greece in the beginning of the week, in which more than 80 Greeks perished and over 1000 houses were left destroyed.

https://voiceofeurope.com/2018/07/p...g-to-set-fire-in-greece/#.W1sce3oLs-M.twitter
 

Foothiller

Veteran Member
The NGOs have no problem saving mohameddans and ******s 1 mile off the Libyan coast, but help actual Europeans? NO f'n way. No boats available. Sorry.

The NGO boats need to be sunk, and the lifeboats strafed.

I take you all saw the breaking news that paki mohameddans were caught setting fires near Greek military bases and that this incident is suspected to be caused by said paki mohameddan?

Diversity is our misery. And no desert people or jungle people belong in Europe or America. They can just **** off back to their deserts and jungles.

Maybe this Maunder minimum thing will trigger an ice age and these low IQ savages will follow their instincts and flee the cold. They aren't equipped to survive long winters anyway. Without welfare they'd starve or flee.
 

compchyk

The Computer Chyck
The Italian media outlets are reporting the fires had been set and a couple of Pakistanis are currently in custody :(

Spoke to family the other day - its been rainy in southern Italy/Sicily/Balkans.
 

Oreally

Right from the start
The NGOs have no problem saving mohameddans and ******s 1 mile off the Libyan coast, but help actual Europeans? NO f'n way. No boats available. Sorry.

The NGO boats need to be sunk, and the lifeboats strafed.

I take you all saw the breaking news that paki mohameddans were caught setting fires near Greek military bases and that this incident is suspected to be caused by said paki mohameddan?

Diversity is our misery. And no desert people or jungle people belong in Europe or America. They can just **** off back to their deserts and jungles.

Maybe this Maunder minimum thing will trigger an ice age and these low IQ savages will follow their instincts and flee the cold. They aren't equipped to survive long winters anyway. Without welfare they'd starve or flee.

once the MM kicks in big time, the entire overpopulated African continent is going to crash hard, with food production world wide severely cut back, and no more surpluses.

also the certain disruption of oil and fertilizer production and shipping, and with the africans constitutionally unable to figure out how to do that themselves on a big enough scale (even though nigeria is sitting on a pool of petroleum) to support themselves, it is going to slip back rapidly again to be the "dark continent".

a few might slip trough the desert to try to get to europe, but the europeans can and will easily stop that flow with a few checkpoints spread out in the sahara once things get serious, and nationalists there take power again.

in the past the climatic tipping point has happened in just a few years, and we could be in the beginning of that now. correlations with the sunspots could seem to indicate that.

it's going to be an interesting next few years.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Now on THIS thread, the Islamic link is appropriate because there is strong evidence (even an arrest) of someone who likely has a jihadi motive of some sort; sadly this does not surprise me given the location and the situation in Greece.
 

Avatar

Human test subject #58652
This is what happened to people FLEEING the fire, right in the middle of town! The wind kept CHANGING DIRECTION so you did not know which way to run from the approaching flames!

AAAmbtT.img

How Can there be a fire hot enough to melt alloy rims right off the incinerated cars, yet the surrounding trees still have leaves on them?
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
How Can there be a fire hot enough to melt alloy rims right off the incinerated cars, yet the surrounding trees still have leaves on them?

The same way the Oakland Hills Firestorm burned the houses two doors down from where I used to live but left the house I used to live in standing; fires, even firestorms can rush in, leap, go sideways and do all sorts of things that may leave one area untouched and another French Fried with no obvious rhyme or reason that is obvious to most of us who are not scientists studying the way wind sheers combine with different levels of heat etc.

The Woo-Woo World explanation is that the fires are somehow started and controlled by super-secret weapons programs, which I think is kind of unlikely unless we see more evidence.
 

NC Susan

Deceased
Now on THIS thread, the Islamic link is appropriate because there is strong evidence (even an arrest) of someone who likely has a jihadi motive of some sort; sadly this does not surprise me given the location and the situation in Greece.


I knew it
I knew it
I knew it

Muslim terrorists rewarding the kindness of a gentle population


Now let's see a revamp of the mafia and let the mafia fix Italy refugee situation
 
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