Greece fires: Thousands flee homes and hotels on Rhodes as fires spread
23 July, 2023
Deputy fire chief Ioannis Artophios said a ferry is available to accommodate people. Others are being housed at an indoor stadium on the island, according to the island's deputy mayor.
Mr Artophios added that firefighters often struggle on Rhodes because of how green it is, which is what makes it an attractive tourist destination.
Greek television showed long queues of tourists with suitcases being taken to safety, with smoke in the background.
One British woman said she was evacuated from the hotel she was staying at with her sister and daughter, but was then stuck on a beach with hundreds of others in the severe heat.
Andrea Layfield from Cheshire said she had been on a boat trip "but it was getting really scary".
"We were asking to go back so they got us and then said they couldn't go any further so we would have to wait on the beach for a while," she said.
"As we waited the fire was coming down the beach but the beach was a dead end," she said, adding that hundreds of people were running.
A boat then arrived, taking only women and children, she said. "I scrambled under somebody's legs and got on." Mark Cook was evacuated by speedboat. "We have just literally escaped from a 5 star luxury resort by boat amid severe conditions. We had to follow our instincts rather than directions," he told the BBC. "Poor visibility, smoke inhalation, no real directions."
One moment he said he was on a sun lounger with his family, "the next ash is falling and smoke rapidly progressing because the winds suddenly got significantly stronger".
He is now flying home despite the family's luggage still being in the hotel.
Travel company TUI said a small number of its hotels had been affected and it was relocating customers to alternative accommodation as a precaution.
Jet2 also said it was aware of the situation in Rhodes and was asking customers to follow local guidance.
But Lee Ruane from Northern Ireland, who is in Rhodes on his honeymoon with wife Rosaleen, told BBC News NI they felt stranded by Jet2 and had been given "no further information".
"We were evacuated from the hotel today about two o'clock, and we've had no communication whatsoever from Jet2, from our hotel, nothing," he said.
Rhodes deputy mayor Konstantinos Taraslias said a change of winds on Saturday morning helped the fire grow bigger and reach tourist areas.
Since breaking out in a mountainous area on Tuesday, the fire has scorched swathes of forest.
Firefighters from Slovakia arrived on Rhodes on Saturday to help local teams battling the fires.
"The situation in Rhodes is serious and extremely difficult. Due to the strong wind and quickly changing direction of the fire, firefighters had to withdraw and move," Slovak Fire and Rescue Services posted on Facebook.
Greece is facing further intense heat this weekend, with meteorologists warning that temperatures could climb to 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 - 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.
Source: www.bbc.com