David Charter, Europe Correspondent, and John Carr in Athens
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While Britain wades through its washed-out summer, hundreds of lives in Eastern and southern Europe have been lost in a week of stifling temperatures and forest fires.
An estimated 500 deaths were attributed to the hottest weather for a century in Hungary, while temperature records were also set in Bulgaria and Greece. The mercury soared to 45C (113F) in Athens yesterday.
Albania, Bosnia and Macedonia each declared a state of emergency as hospitals struggled to cope with victims of heat-related conditions.
In Italy, Rome sweltered, while on the coast in Puglia holidaymakers had to escape by sea from brush fires that swept down to the beaches and claimed at least four lives.
Winds fanned dozens of fires in Greece, but the real culprits behind many of the blazes were believed to be arsonists working for property developers. Athens was ringed by fires, forcing the evacuation of children’s summer camps and a village near Corinth.
Several hundred acres of woodland have been burnt in the hills in the past week and three firemen died in one fire.
The Kathimerini newspaper called the fires “an ecological crime without punishment”. It referred to data from the European Central Bank showing that corruption in Greece – including bribes to officials by land-hungry property developers – cost the country €15 billion (£10 billion) a year. There have been two million applications to declassify forest land for building and commercial development and some of those who are turned down simply hire arsonists to clear the land and then bribe officials to look the other way. “People don’t think twice about turning farmland or public land into building plots,” Kathimerini said. “The powers that be, meanwhile, do nothing.”
In Hungary, temperatures hit 41.9C in the southern city of Kiskunhalas – the highest recorded in the country. Ferenc Falus, the chief medical officer, said that in the past week the heat in central Hungary “contributed to the early death of 230 people, which nationally means about 500 deaths”. Most were attributed to heatstroke, cardiovascular problems and other illnesses aggravated by the high temperatures.
Bulgaria reached its highest recorded temperature of 44C and shifts for municipal workers were reduced to half a day.
Eugen Nicolaescu, the Romanian Health Minister, said that at least 27 people had died from heat-related conditions. Hundreds of mostly elderly people had collapsed in the street, he said.
Romanian authorities said that the heat had resulted in 19,000 people being admitted to hospital, most often with respiratory problems. Theatres in Bucharest were converted into water distribution centres.
Four people were killed by fast-moving forest fires in southern Italy that were blamed on arsonists. Emergency workers used boats and helicopters to transfer 4,000 holidaymakers and residents to safety from beaches in Puglia. Two people were found burnt to death in a car and two were suffocated by smoke on a beach near the village of Peschici. The pilot of a firefighting plane was killed on Monday when he crashed in the Abruzzo region.
About 2,000 fires have been reported in Serbia in the past five days, leaving at least 400 acres of forest burnt. In Macedonia, one person died and twenty were forced to leave burning houses near Bitola, the country’s second-largest city, as temperatures reached 42C amid a declared national emergency.
The extreme temperatures were dipping last night as southern and Eastern Europe prepared for storms in place of the scorching sunshine.
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If it's global warming, why is the UK so wet and cold this year?
John, Coventry,
Richard, you're wrong. Climate change IS INDEED a fact. We are at the very end of the last ice age and are experiencing the first of many waves of warm weather worldwide that will follow. All the rancor about manmade global warming has obscured this natural cycle of the world's climate. What I fear is the turning off of the Gulf Stream by a great inflow to the ocean of fresh water from the melting of the Arctic icecap and the Greenland glaciers. This would trigger another iceage; another part of the cycle.
Vernon Goins, Atlanta, GA
Climate change is NOT a fact. It is a theory. Weather is purely cyclical. The last time we had weather like this was in 1912. Not never before - 1912 which is a mere tick in the clcok of the world.
Richard, Plymouth,
Might I suggest that our fellow Europeans could do worse than take a holiday in Britain this year? Outside of the flooded areas of Gloucestershire and Oxfordshire, the weather is pleasantly cool with intermittent showers. In stark contrast to last year when we suffered from drought in the southeast, the countryside is lush and green. Another bonus of our wet summer is that air pollution is well down. So come on Italians and Greeks, now is the time to make that once in a lifetime visit to London. See the Parthenon marbles, eat in our fabulous restaurants, gop to the theatere and above all, enjoy the cool!
Adrian Gilbert, Tonbridge, England
âThe powers that be, meanwhile, do nothing.â
sounds familiar for wherever we are.
Johnny, Hampshire,
Now try and tell me that climate change is not a fact.
Jennifer Hynes, Plymouth, England
It doesn't matter what anyone else does or doesn't do. A little drip can wear away a stone...
We all have a conscience so do your bit. Cut down, don't waste, try your best and don't beat yourself up if you have to drive or fart or whatever adds to global warming, just keep on trying to clean up your act and pass the word along...
Patricia Thirgood, Enniskillen, N Ireland
Yes there certainly are plenty of extra-terrestrials out there still driving 4x4s and sitting in arctic air-con homes. The population of Iran for starters, where petrol costs 10 cents a litre and other utilities are so cheap, and the rest of the middle east and quite a bit of asia.............. the point is that worthy environmentally minded Europeans and other global citizens are vastly outnnumbered by people who have barely heard of global warming. Without strong global limits enforced from the top down any feeble individual efforts will be futile. Don't assume that the developing world is interested in the same things as yourselves.
rebecca Hathaway, tehran, Iran
While it heats up in one place, it cools in another.
It is clear that the weather is changing, however there is no proof that it would not be changing if humans were not here. There IS proof that the weather has heated & cooled in the past, without the help of humans, as per The Medieval Warm Period (from about 850 until 1250 AD) indicated in the 2 miles of core samples taken from the ice cap in Greenland.
.....so rave on Chicken Littles of the world.
2oonhed, toon-town, MYOB, USA
Are there still any extra-terrestrials out there who still doubt the weather is getting hotter and hotter, and who mindlessly drive their 4X4 aroud, enjoy full-blast air-conditioning in shops that keep their doors wide open, etc... it kills me, literally speaking.
Martine THEDREZ, Blois, France
I have a suspicion that those fifth world nations will present a huge bill to the E.U. They're members now, aren't they?
It's going to be very expensive. Britain drowning, Southern Europe baking and burning, 4 billion pounds for war ships, Blair upbeat about the Middle-East...
Please tell me, so that I can make arrangements as to stay here.
Pete, Mexico City, Mexico