Thousands of people have been evacuated from homes and hotels on the Greek island of Rhodes, according to local authorities.
Private boats have joined the Greek coastguard in helping to pick up people from beaches on the east of the island.
Greek navy vessels are also reported to be heading to the area, which is popular with tourists.
Greece’s deputy fire chief said the fires on Rhodes are the most difficult his service is currently facing.
Five helicopters and 173 firefighters are operating in the area, with two hotels in the Kiotari area reported to have been damaged by fire.
One British woman said she was evacuated from the hotel she was staying at with her sister and daughter, but was now stuck on a beach with hundreds of others in the severe heat.
- New Greece heatwave warning as fires still burn
- How to manage your holiday in a heatwave
“There’s just a small shack here and there’s so many of us,” Becky Mulligan told the BBC. “There’s children, it’s the middle of the day, we are just stuck here with no help, it’s disgusting.”
Simon Wheatley said ash had begun falling onto his pizza when he was eating at his hotel.
“The hotel said this was normal and there was no need to worry as they were in contact with the authorities about the situation,” he told the BBC.
His hotel was later evacuated.
“We saw that a beach bar that we were at just the day before had burnt down. The smoke was so bad. We had to leave two bags of luggage.”
Greece is facing further intense heat this weekend, with meteorologists warning that temperatures could climb as high as 45C (113F).
It could turn into Greece’s hottest July weekend in 50 years, one of the country’s top meteorologists has said.
Firefighters are continuing to battle dozens of wildfires across the country. An area west of Athens is among the worst-hit areas, along with Laconia in the southern Peloponnese and the island of Rhodes.
And authorities are warning of a very high risk of new blazes as the heat continues to rise.
People have been advised to stay home, and tourist sites – including Athens’ ancient Acropolis – will be shut during the hottest parts of the next two days.
Greece’s EU partners have provided help, including firefighting planes from France and Italy and more than 200 firefighters from Poland, Slovakia, Romania and Bulgaria. Neighbouring Turkey is also sending some aircraft to help.
Greece – like a number of other European countries – saw a prolonged spell of extreme heat earlier this month.
The latest heatwave comes at one of the busiest times for the country’s tourism industry.
Related Topics
- Europe heatwaves
- Greece
- Wildfires
- Climate change