Greek Minister Resigns After Criticism of Wildfire Response

Greek Minister Resigns After Criticism of Wildfire Response
Greece's Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, right, and Greek public order minister Nikos Toskas attend a ceremony in Athens on March 3, 2018. (Yannis Liakos/InTime News via AP, file)
The Associated Press
8/3/2018
Updated:
8/3/2018

ATHENS, Greece—Greece’s public order minister resigned Friday over the deadly forest fire that killed at least 88 people in a seaside area near Athens last week, after spending days defending the way authorities had handled the disaster.

A government statement said Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras met with Nikos Toskas and accepted his resignation.

In a tweet after the meeting, Tsipras thanked Toskas for his “courage” in stepping down. “I warmly thank (him) for the honesty and dedication he displayed during the discharge of his duties,” Tsipras added.

Toskas—and other government officials—came under intense criticism from Greek opposition parties over authorities’ response to the devastating fire at the seaside resort of Mati, and for his assertion in a press conference that, despite considerable soul-searching, he had not discerned any major errors in how the emergency was handled.

Greek public order minister Nikos Toskas attends a ceremony in Athens on March 31, 2018. (Panayiotis Tzamaros/InTime News via AP, file)
Greek public order minister Nikos Toskas attends a ceremony in Athens on March 31, 2018. (Panayiotis Tzamaros/InTime News via AP, file)

Critics focused on the absence of any official evacuation effort for residents before the flames reached Mati, on police allegedly allowing traffic diversions that sent motorists into deadly fire zone, and on an allegedly delayed announcement of the first deaths.

Toskas also initially suggested that arsonists could be to blame for the fire, although later indications suggested negligence by somebody trying to burn garden waste.

Earlier Friday, the government said authorities will start demolishing dozens of illegal fences and other structures in the wider Athens region next week in a crackdown on structures built without permits.

Greek officials are claiming that such structures were a major contributing factor to the wildfire’s high death toll.

Environment Minister Giorgos Stathakis told Greek radio channel 24/7 that 61 structures, mainly fencing, will be removed at sites on beaches, streams and areas earmarked for reforestation in several regions of Attica.

The Mati blaze was the deadliest in decades, in a hot, dry country where summer wildfires are a constant major hazard.

People swim at a beach in Rafina, east of Athens, on Aug. 1, 2018, ten days after the the wildfire. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)
People swim at a beach in Rafina, east of Athens, on Aug. 1, 2018, ten days after the the wildfire. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)

Hundreds of people fled to beaches, but even there the flames and choking smoke from the wildfire forced many to swim out to sea despite gale-force winds. Many survivors spent hours in the water until they were rescued by the coast guard, fishing boats and other boats. Several drowned.

Coroner Ilias Bogiokas said the wildfire was so hot that “there was almost nothing left” of many of the bodies.

“For the bodies to be in this state, with full carbonization and with parts often turned to ashes ... the temperatures must have been very high in a very short period of time,” he told The Associated Press. “Whatever happened, happened in minutes.”

One more woman died Friday of her wounds from the Mati wildfire, yet 11 days after the fire the exact death toll was still unclear, with figures diverging between coroners and the fire department.

On July 27, coroners announced they had performed autopsies on the remains of 86 people. In addition, one more person died that day in a hospital and another woman died in hospital on Friday. On July 30, coast guard divers recovered the body of a man from the sea off the coast of the decimated resort area, which would bring the number of dead to 89.

The fire service, however, which has been issuing the official death toll, put the number of dead Friday night at 88, including two unidentified, unclaimed bodies and five people who died in hospitals.

Neither the coroners’ office nor the fire department could explain the discrepancy.

Greek state ERT TV said the woman who died Friday was the 35-year-old mother of a six-month-old baby that died in the fire and the wife of a fireman who fought the blaze.