Tens of thousands of people have been forced to leave their homes and abandon holidays on Greek islands including Rhodes and Corfu as fires spread across the region.
In Rhodes a black scar has been scorched across the middle of the island to the southern town of Kiotari.
Satellite images show the extent of the damage to the popular holiday resort.
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The flames have destroyed many homes and businesses in the town.
The fires have been burning since last week on Rhodes, where temperatures have reached 45C.
More than 30,000 people have fled the flames on the island since the weekend, Greece’s largest-ever wildfire evacuation.
Some 16,000 people have been transported across land and another 3,000 evacuated by sea, police say. Others have had to leave by road or use their own transport.
They include thousands of tourists who had to make for temporary shelters like sports stadiums before getting the emergency planes laid on by travel companies.
But with Greece in the middle of a long spell of extreme heat that has increased the risk of wildfires across the country, Rhodes is not the only place that has been affected.
Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis says the country is “at war” with the wildfires and warns it faces “another three difficult days ahead” before temperatures are expected to drop.
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Civil protection minister Vassilis Kikilia says fire crews have been fighting more than 500 fires across the country over the past 12 days – including in Midea on the mainland.
Firefighters also say the situation in Corfu and Evia is not totally under control.
And Crete, the largest of the Greek Islands, has been also been put on high alert because of an extreme risk of fire.
The situation in Greece is the result of a heatwave across southern Europe and northern Africa that has helped create dry conditions and also let fires take hold in Sicily, Croatia, Algeria and Tunisia.
The situation would have been “virtually impossible” without human-induced climate change, scientists say, adding it has made the heatwave in Europe 2.5C hotter.
By Chris Clayton, Dominic Bailey, Tural Ahmedzade and Kate Gaynor
Related Topics
- Tourism
- Europe heatwaves
- Greece
- Wildfires
- Climate change
- Heatwaves