As major fires continue to burn across Greece, an official has said the monuments at Olympia, a key site of antiquity in the country’s west, had been saved from approaching flames.
“The site has been saved for the time being,” the regional governor, Nektarios Farmakis, told state television early in the day, but warned that “the danger is not over.”
He hoped the fire would be brought under control in the next few hours with the help of helicopters and firefighting planes, he said.
Wildfires burning across Greece have been caused by widespread droughts and unseasonably high temperatures that have soared to between 40 and 47 degrees Celsius during the past 10 days.
“We still have difficult days ahead of us,” Civil Defence head Nikos Chardalias said late on Wednesday following an emergency meeting with the heads of the fire brigade.
Firefighters and volunteers battled throughout the night to bring fires under control that had threatened to reach the ancient temples of Olympia, the birthplace of the most famous and important sporting event in the ancient world.
“We are doing everything humanly possible to save Olympia,” Culture Minister Lina Mendoni told Greek state television.
Firefighting units and local authorities formed a last line of defence against the wildfires approaching the monuments and stadium of Olympia.
Early on Thursday, light winds shifted the flames away from Olympia, according to reporters at the scene.
AAP
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