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‘War zone’: Thousands evacuated from Greek islands as fires spread

Australians who escaped the fire-ravaged Greek island of Rhodes have told of the panic and chaos during their evacuation. Warning: Graphic

Aerial video shows devastation on Rhodes island

Authorities evacuated nearly 2,500 people from the Ionian island of Corfu on Monday as heat-battered Greece found itself “at war” with several wildfires burning out of control.

Last week, thousands of children were evacuated from Athens’ holiday villages and over the weekend, tens of thousands of people fled blazes on the large island of Rhodes in the Southeast Aegean, with terrified tourists scrambling to get home on evacuation flights.

Some 30,000 people fled the flames on Rhodes at the weekend, the country’s largest-ever wildfire evacuation.

This satellite image shows a view of a fire near Gennadi on Rhodes island in Greece. Tens of thousands of people have already fled. Picture: AFP
This satellite image shows a view of a fire near Gennadi on Rhodes island in Greece. Tens of thousands of people have already fled. Picture: AFP

The local Australian Ambassador has issued advice to Australians in need of consular assistance in Rhodes or other parts of Greece affected by wildfires, urging them to call +61 2 6261 3305 and also follow the advice of local authorities.

Several European countries set up consular offices at the Rhodes airport on Sunday evening to help their nationals fly back.

Laura Bentley, who was travelling with her Australian husband, feared for their daughter, five, when they were forced to flee the Princess Andriana Resort, near Kiotari, Rhodes on Saturday when high winds and temperatures whipped the blazes to apocalyptic proportions.

“On the Friday when it happened, we were told to evacuate and couldn’t get our bags at the hotel, so we left with what we were wearing,” she said.

She described fleeing on foot in 40C heat.

Laura Bentley and her Australian husband feared for their daughter, five, when they were forced to flee the Princess Andriana resort near Kiotari in Rhodes. Picture: Danielle Gusmaroli
Laura Bentley and her Australian husband feared for their daughter, five, when they were forced to flee the Princess Andriana resort near Kiotari in Rhodes. Picture: Danielle Gusmaroli

“We had friends with small children. Some said they could feel the heat of the flames growing closer and feared.

“The firefighters shouted at us ‘Madam, your life! Leave! Leave everything behind!”

“We saw queues of people just walking in the heat. We found a hotel and sought refuge.

“We were worried for our little one, she was crying a lot and was really clinging,” said Ms Bentley.

Residents use a hose to attempt to stop a fire from approaching houses. Picture: AFP
Residents use a hose to attempt to stop a fire from approaching houses. Picture: AFP
A deer runs with smoke in the background on the island of Rhodes. Picture: AFP
A deer runs with smoke in the background on the island of Rhodes. Picture: AFP
A fireman holds a cat and two rabbits after rescuing them from a fire between the villages of Kiotari and Genadi, on the Greek island of Rhodes. Picture: AFP
A fireman holds a cat and two rabbits after rescuing them from a fire between the villages of Kiotari and Genadi, on the Greek island of Rhodes. Picture: AFP

As the flames marched down hill, thousands of people made their way in procession towards the coast and the safety of the sea.

“It was the scariest moment in my entire life, it was mass panic,” said Claire Caine, who also had to flee the Princess Andriana Resort, near Kiotari, with her husband Scott and their three children 9, 13 and 13.

“We didn’t know what the next steps were, kept making decisions based on what we felt at the time because no one was helping or giving us instructions,” she said.

“We literally had to run from the hotel for our lives. I can still smell the ash on me, I’ll never get over that, it was a horrible experience, to think you might never come out alive.”

Residents stand at the top of a hill watching the fire approaching their villages on the Greek island of Rhodes. Picture: AFP
Residents stand at the top of a hill watching the fire approaching their villages on the Greek island of Rhodes. Picture: AFP
Burnt animals near Asklipeio on the Greek island of Rhodes, as tens of thousands of people including Australians have fled blazes on the island. Picture: AFP
Burnt animals near Asklipeio on the Greek island of Rhodes, as tens of thousands of people including Australians have fled blazes on the island. Picture: AFP

Eileen Johnston, 70, from Hendon, northwest London, watched the flames encroach her hotel in Lindos Village in Rhodes for days but it was only when the fire knocked at her hotel door that the staff told her to evacuate.

“The hotel kept telling us not to leave, that it was fine but it wasn’t, on Sunday it just blew up,” she said.

“It was horrific, horrific, disorganised chaos,” she said upon her return to the UK at Stansted Airport on Monday.

“I saw this huge ball of fire coming towards me. Eventually the fire alarm went off and staff shouted ‘evacuate, evacuate,’” she said.

Eileen Johnston, 70, watched flames encroach her hotel in Rhodes for days but it was only when the fire knocked at her hotel door that the staff told her to evacuate. Picture: Danielle Gusmaroli
Eileen Johnston, 70, watched flames encroach her hotel in Rhodes for days but it was only when the fire knocked at her hotel door that the staff told her to evacuate. Picture: Danielle Gusmaroli

She was among hundreds of holiday-makers, including a young Australian couple and their several month old baby, who described being abandoned by travel companies as they ran for their lives from one of the worst wildfires ever to strike the island.

“We ran, and I fell over in the ground in the rush,” she said.

“I looked to help the Australian couple but I lost them in the smoke,” she said.

“Buses didn’t turn up, the ones that did were full or had queues of people. It was a nightmare and no reps from any of the companies helped us.

“They told us to go up the hill, then they told us to make our way to where it was safe at the sea but in the end we had to walk five miles to school.

The flames were huge, the sky was thick with smoke.

Claire Caine had to be evacuated from Rhodes with her husband Scott and three teenage children. Picture: Danielle Gusmaroli
Claire Caine had to be evacuated from Rhodes with her husband Scott and three teenage children. Picture: Danielle Gusmaroli

“We had to lie on towels on the ground for days at the school before we found a hotel… for a fortune, mind you, and on top of it, I’ve got no luggage.

“We shouldn’t be going to any countries with bush fires, the government needs to send warnings to holiday-makers not to go abroad while Europe’s weather is a catastrophe.”

Claire Caine, who had to be evacuated from Rhodes with her husband Scott and three teenage children, agreed.

Firefighters tackled blazes that erupted in peak tourism season, sparking Greece’s largest-ever wildfire evacuation. Picture: AFP
Firefighters tackled blazes that erupted in peak tourism season, sparking Greece’s largest-ever wildfire evacuation. Picture: AFP

“We are at war and are exclusively geared towards the fire front,” Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis told parliament on Monday, warning that the nation faced “another three difficult days ahead” before high temperatures are forecast to ease.

Greece has been sweltering under a lengthy spell of extreme heat that has exacerbated wildfire risk and left visitors stranded in peak tourist season.

Kelly Squirrel, a transport administrator from the United Kingdom, said police had ordered people from her hotel on Rhodes to evacuate.

“We had to keep walking,” she told AFP at the international airport. “So we walked for about six hours in the heat.”

Greek television broadcast images of long lines of people, some in beachwear, lugging suitcases along the island’s roads on Saturday, when the evacuations were ordered.

Greek and European flags on a burnt building amid a fire between the villages of Kiotari and Genadi, on the Greek island of Rhodes. Picture: AFP
Greek and European flags on a burnt building amid a fire between the villages of Kiotari and Genadi, on the Greek island of Rhodes. Picture: AFP

Police said 16,000 people had been transported on land and evacuated 3,000 by sea. Others had to flee by road or used their own transport after being told to leave the area.

“We are exhausted and traumatised,” said Daniel-Cladin Schmidt, a 42-year-old German tourist waiting to be evacuated with his wife and nine-year-old son.

“There were thousands of people, the buses couldn’t pass, we had to walk for more than two hours,” he told AFP at Rhodes airport.

“We couldn’t breathe, we just covered our faces and moved forward.”

Firefighters and civilians confront a wall of smoke as wildfires burn, in the northern part of the Greek island of Corfu. Picture: AFP
Firefighters and civilians confront a wall of smoke as wildfires burn, in the northern part of the Greek island of Corfu. Picture: AFP

Holiday-makers and some locals spent the night in gyms, schools and hotel conference centres on the island.

In the departures hall of the international airport, AFP saw groups of tourists sleeping on the floor, surrounded by luggage.

“We had to lend a woman some of my wife’s clothes because she had nothing to wear,” Kevin Sales, an engineer from England, told AFP. “It was terrible.”

Several travel companies have halted their inbound tourist flights to Rhodes, and have been helping to ferry foreigners home.

A helicopter drops water over fires in the northern part of the Greek island of Corfu as evacuations are underway. Picture: AFP
A helicopter drops water over fires in the northern part of the Greek island of Corfu as evacuations are underway. Picture: AFP

“We ran 10 kilometres with all our luggage to escape the flames”, while the temperature was 42 degrees Celsius, said German tourist Lena Schwarz, after arriving at Hanover airport overnight Sunday into Monday.

The 38-year-old told AFP their journey leaving Rhodes was “hell on Earth”.

Oxana Neb, 50, also arriving at Hanover, said the evacuation had been “very bad”.

“We stayed in the hotel until the end and fire came from all sides,” she said. She joined other guests running to the beach, eventually abandoning her suitcases on the way, she said.

A burnt car sits in foreground of a charred area after a fire near the village of Kiotari, on the Greek island of Rhodes. Picture: AFP
A burnt car sits in foreground of a charred area after a fire near the village of Kiotari, on the Greek island of Rhodes. Picture: AFP

Crews have been battling the flames in parts of Greece for about a week, and firefighters were from dawn on Monday using aircraft to try to douse the flames on Rhodes.

According to the authorities, many regions were under extreme risk of forest fires on Monday, but no towns were directly threatened by flames, the fire service told AFP.

Like every summer, Greece is plagued by forest fires, often deadly, ravaging tens of thousands of hectares of forest and vegetation.

This summer, the country experienced one of the longest heatwaves in recent years, according to experts, with the thermometer hitting 45 degrees Celsius at the weekend.

On Monday, the heat was expected to ease slightly with temperatures expected to reach 37C in Athens, but on Tuesday, it was forecast to pick up again.

Travellers arrive after returning from the Greek island of Rhodes where evacuations are underway due to wildfires. Picture: AFP / Netherlands OUT
Travellers arrive after returning from the Greek island of Rhodes where evacuations are underway due to wildfires. Picture: AFP / Netherlands OUT

“It’s getting better but a lot of planes are full, so you have to be patient. The situation should normalise in a few days,” said a French consulate representative, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Tourists are evacuated from hotels during wildfires on the Greek island of Rhodes. Picture: Stringer / Eurokinissi / AFP
Tourists are evacuated from hotels during wildfires on the Greek island of Rhodes. Picture: Stringer / Eurokinissi / AFP
Coastguards lead more than 20 boats in an emergency evacuation to rescue people from the island of Rhodes where fire has been raging out of control for five days. Picture: AFP
Coastguards lead more than 20 boats in an emergency evacuation to rescue people from the island of Rhodes where fire has been raging out of control for five days. Picture: AFP

The island of Rhodes has now been on fire for a week. Temperatures, which reached 45 degrees Celsius in central Greece on Sunday, were expected to dip on Monday before the mercury rises again for another four-day heatwave.

The fire service is not ruling out the possibility of arson, but local resident Maria Dalouka says it’s now painfully clear that people need to take better care about leaving flammable waste in wooded areas.

A deer runs with during a fire between the villages of Kiotari and Gennadi, on the Greek island of Rhodes. Picture: AFP
A deer runs with during a fire between the villages of Kiotari and Gennadi, on the Greek island of Rhodes. Picture: AFP

“It’s not like the old days, climate change has impacted us and will continue to do so,” said the 66-year-old, who owns a cafe in the fire-ravaged village of Kiotari.

“We ask for help from all of Europe... everything is black, please come and let’s plant some trees,” she said.

Tourists stand outside a school where they spent their night due to the wildfire in Rhodes. Picture: AFP
Tourists stand outside a school where they spent their night due to the wildfire in Rhodes. Picture: AFP
Tourists gather in a basketball hall. Picture: AFP
Tourists gather in a basketball hall. Picture: AFP
As many as 40,000 tourists have been evacuated or displaced due to historic fires on the Greek island of Rhodes. Picture: AFP
As many as 40,000 tourists have been evacuated or displaced due to historic fires on the Greek island of Rhodes. Picture: AFP

“This is the biggest fire evacuation ever in Greece,” Konstantia Dimoglidou, Greek police spokeswoman told AFP.

“We had to evacuate an area of 30,000 people.”

Police said that authorities had transported some 16,000 people across land, with 3,000 evacuated by sea, and others fleeing by road or under their own transport after being told to leave the area.

German travel giant Tui said it was suspending all of its inbound passenger flights to Rhodes until Tuesday but would fly in empty planes to help evacuate tourists.

Spokesperson Linda Jonczyk told AFP that Tui had some 40,000 tourists in Rhodes, of which 7,800 are affected by the fires.

The low-cost British carrier Jet2 also said it had cancelled “all flights and holidays” to the island.

Tourists rest as they wait in the airport's departure hall as evacuations are underway due to wildfires, on the Greek island of Rhodes. Picture: AFP
Tourists rest as they wait in the airport's departure hall as evacuations are underway due to wildfires, on the Greek island of Rhodes. Picture: AFP

One German tourist told the Bild daily that they were “saved from the fire at the last moment” after returning from the beach on Saturday to a deserted hotel.

“We had embers flying around our heads and no help was in sight,” said 23-year-old Paul from Bielefeld.

“I had the feeling of being on my own, it was so hot and the smoke was already so thick we couldn’t have survived another ten minutes.” He said buses then arrived to evacuate the tourists, but some were so panicked they were trying to find boats to escape on from the beach.

Tourists sit in the back of an open air lorry as they are evacuated during wildfires on the Greek island of Rhodes. Picture: AFP
Tourists sit in the back of an open air lorry as they are evacuated during wildfires on the Greek island of Rhodes. Picture: AFP

Authorities have warned that the battle to contain the flames will take several days.

More than 260 firefighters, backed by 18 aircraft, were battling the fire on Sunday, with Croatia, France, Slovakia and Turkey having contributed equipment and personnel, officials said.

Last year Rhodes, which has a population of over 100,000, welcomed some 2.5 million tourist arrivals.

The Greek foreign ministry and embassies in Greece were setting up a station at the Rhodes airport to help tourists that have lost travel documents in the scramble to evacuate.

People sit in the back of a truck during a fire near the village of Malona in the Greek island of Rhodes. Picture: AFP
People sit in the back of a truck during a fire near the village of Malona in the Greek island of Rhodes. Picture: AFP

A large part of the island was without electricity as the public power utility shut down the local plant in the south for safety reasons.

“This is a special fire here because the heart of Rhodes and its environment is affected,” Efthymios Lekkas, a professor specialising in natural disasters told ERT TV on Sunday, warning of a severe impact to the island’s tourist industry.

“I just did a drive from Lindos to Gennadi,” he said. “All the big hotels have closed. I don’t think they will be able to operate this year because the surrounding area in each unit has been completely destroyed, and the environment is not inspiring for a holiday.”

The Greek presidency cancelled a national holiday planned for Monday “in view of the extraordinary conditions prevailing in the country due to the fires.” A separate wildfire broke out on Greece’s second-largest island, Evia, according to the fire services, although it was not near any homes.

Evia, situated off central Greece’s eastern coast, was devastated last year by some of the worst wildfires in the country’s history.

SCOTT MORRISON STRANDED IN GREECE HEATWAVE

Former Prime Minister Scott Morrison was made to wait 30 minutes for a ferry during Greece’s stiflingly hot weather before lugging his family’s suitcases aboard the packed boat.

According to a report in the Daily Mail, the tanned former prime minister was spotted waiting for the ferry to arrive on Sifnos, in the Cyclades islands, before travelling to Athens.

Scott Morrison is on holiday in Europe with wife Jenny and daughters Lily and Abbey. Picture: Getty Images
Scott Morrison is on holiday in Europe with wife Jenny and daughters Lily and Abbey. Picture: Getty Images

The ferry, which takes two-and-a-half hours to reach Athens, is a world away from Mr Morrison’s preferred mode of travel on his beloved Shark One – a $250 million specially-converted RAAF jet which he used to fly around the world in during his time as Australia’s prime minister.

Mr Morrison waited for the ferry with his wife Jenny and daughters Abbey and Lily at about 12.15pm local time as they continued the family’s European holiday.

The Morrisons sat in a packed area with other passengers and their luggage under the boiling sun for about half an hour as he waited to board.

An aerial view of Athens shows smoke from a fire in the background as Europe wilted under a relentless heatwave and wildfires. Picture: AFP
An aerial view of Athens shows smoke from a fire in the background as Europe wilted under a relentless heatwave and wildfires. Picture: AFP

According to onlookers, Mr Morrison looked in total holiday mode, sporting a navy blue polo, beige shorts, Ray-Ban sunglasses and had a white cap laying on top of his luggage while he listened to audio on his AirPods.

A passenger on board told the Daily Mail that Mr Morrison tried to keep a low profile.

“At first it was hard to recognise him as he kept his head down a lot,” the passenger told the outlet.

“He was very aware of the people around him, perhaps not wanting to be recognised as the islands are popular with Australian travellers.

Fires have continued to rage near Athens as Europe’s heatwave shows no signs of abating. Picture: Getty Images
Fires have continued to rage near Athens as Europe’s heatwave shows no signs of abating. Picture: Getty Images

“ScoMo had his AirPods in, not really saying much to his family. Mostly he had his head in his phone, perhaps to help keep his head down.”

The Morrisons reportedly got off in Athens to continue their family holiday as Europe continues to deal with an unprecedented heatwave.

In Greece, the heat has led authorities to close historic sites in the city, including the Acropolis.

NORTHERN HEMISPHERE HIT BY EXTREME TEMPERATURES

It comes as swathes of Europe baked in a heatwave trailed by wildfires and health warnings, as parts of Asia and the United States also suffered under extreme weather on Tuesday local time.

Firefighters battled blazes in parts of Greece and the Canary Islands and Spain issued heat alerts, while some children in Italy’s Sardinia were warned away from sports for safety reasons.

In the United States, the city of Phoenix broke a 49-year-old record with its 19th consecutive day of temperatures of 43C (110F) or higher, weather officials said.

Dee Lee, 34, cools off amid searing heat in Phoenix, Arizona. Picture: Getty Images/AFP
Dee Lee, 34, cools off amid searing heat in Phoenix, Arizona. Picture: Getty Images/AFP
In an aerial view, a billboard displays the temperature that was forecast to reach 115 degrees Fahrenheit in Phoenix, Arizona. Picture: Getty Images/AFP
In an aerial view, a billboard displays the temperature that was forecast to reach 115 degrees Fahrenheit in Phoenix, Arizona. Picture: Getty Images/AFP
A person cools off amid searing heat in Phoenix, Arizona. Picture: Getty Images/AFP
A person cools off amid searing heat in Phoenix, Arizona. Picture: Getty Images/AFP

“You can’t be in the street, it’s horrible,” said Lidia Rodriguez, 27, in Madrid.

From the Washington to Beijing, authorities have warned in recent days of the health dangers of the extreme heat, urging people to drink water and shelter from the sun.

Several local temperature records were broken in southern France, the weather service there said.

Meteo France said a record 29.5 C had been reached in the Alpine ski resort of Alpe d’Huez, which sits at an altitude of 1860 metres, while 40.6C had been recorded for the first time in Verdun in the foothills of the Pyrenees.

In a stark reminder of the effects of global warming, the UN’s World Meteorological Agency (WMO) said the trend of heatwaves “shows no signs of decreasing”.

“These events will continue to grow in intensity, and the world needs to prepare for more intense heatwaves,” John Nairn, a senior extreme heat adviser at the WMO told reporters in Geneva.

EUROPEAN COUNTRIES GRIPPED BY WILDFIRES, SCORCHING HEAT

Northwest of the Greek capital Athens, columns of smoke loomed over the forest of Dervenohoria, where one of several fires around the capital and beyond was still burning.
Still burning was a forest fire by the seaside resort of Loutraki, where the mayor said 1200 children had been evacuated Monday from holiday camps.
In the Canary Islands, some 400 firefighters battled a blaze that has ravaged 3500 hectares of forest and forced 4000 residents to evacuate, with authorities warning residents to wear face masks outside due to poor air quality.

Firefighters and volunteers try to extinguish a wildfire raging in Verori, near Loutraki city, Peloponnese, southern Greece. Picture: EPA/VASSILIS PSOMAS
Firefighters and volunteers try to extinguish a wildfire raging in Verori, near Loutraki city, Peloponnese, southern Greece. Picture: EPA/VASSILIS PSOMAS
A fireman watches as a helicopter tries to extinguish a wildfire raging in Verori, near Loutraki city, Peloponnese, southern Greece. Picture: EPA/VASSILIS PSOMAS
A fireman watches as a helicopter tries to extinguish a wildfire raging in Verori, near Loutraki city, Peloponnese, southern Greece. Picture: EPA/VASSILIS PSOMAS
Wildfire rages by the houses in the settlement of Irini, near the resort town of Loutraki. Picture: AFP
Wildfire rages by the houses in the settlement of Irini, near the resort town of Loutraki. Picture: AFP
Firefighters try to put out a wildfire 50km southeast from the centre of Athens. Picture: AFP
Firefighters try to put out a wildfire 50km southeast from the centre of Athens. Picture: AFP

Temperatures were unforgiving in Italy and in Spain, where three regions were put under hot weather red alerts.

The Italian islands of Sardinia and Sicily have been on watch to possibly surpass a continent-wide record of 48.8C (nearly 120F), recorded in Sicily in August 2021.

At Lanusei, near Sardinia’s eastern coast, a children’s summer camp was restricting beach visits to the early morning and forbidding sports, teacher Morgana Cucca told AFP.

A pharmacy's sign indicating the current outside temperature near the Scalinata di Trinita dei Monti (Spanish Steps) in Rome. Picture: AFP
A pharmacy's sign indicating the current outside temperature near the Scalinata di Trinita dei Monti (Spanish Steps) in Rome. Picture: AFP
People enjoy the banks of the Guadiaro river at "La Cueva del Gato" near Benaojan, in southern Spain. Picture: AFP
People enjoy the banks of the Guadiaro river at "La Cueva del Gato" near Benaojan, in southern Spain. Picture: AFP
People row in a boat at the Retiro Park in Madrid during a heatwave. Picture: AFP
People row in a boat at the Retiro Park in Madrid during a heatwave. Picture: AFP

In the Sardinian capital of Cagliari, pharmacist Teresa Angioni said patients were complaining of heat-related symptoms.

“They mainly buy magnesium and potassium supplements and ask us to measure their blood pressure, which is often low,” Angioni said.

A member of the public holds a cold water bottle on her skin in Rome as Italy is hit by a heatwave. Picture: AFP
A member of the public holds a cold water bottle on her skin in Rome as Italy is hit by a heatwave. Picture: AFP
A boy cools down at the Barcaccia fountain in front of the Scalinata di Trinita dei Monti (Spanish Steps) in Rome. Picture: AFP
A boy cools down at the Barcaccia fountain in front of the Scalinata di Trinita dei Monti (Spanish Steps) in Rome. Picture: AFP
A woman fills a bottle with water at the Barcaccia fountain in front of the Scalinata di Trinita dei Monti (Spanish Steps) in Rome. Picture: AFP
A woman fills a bottle with water at the Barcaccia fountain in front of the Scalinata di Trinita dei Monti (Spanish Steps) in Rome. Picture: AFP

Many throughout Italy sought escape by the sea, including outside Rome, where the midday heat hit 40C (104F).

“Certainly it’s better at the beach, you can at least get a little wind from the sea. It’s not even possible to remain in the city, too hot,” said Virginia Cesario, 30, at the Focene beach near the capital.

A man cools off in a fountain in Zagreb during a heatwave in Croatia. Picture: AFP
A man cools off in a fountain in Zagreb during a heatwave in Croatia. Picture: AFP
Tourists shelter from the sun with umbrellas near the Colosseum in Rome. Picture: AFP
Tourists shelter from the sun with umbrellas near the Colosseum in Rome. Picture: AFP
People rest in the shade in Sevilla, in the southern Spanish region of Andalusia. Picture: AFP
People rest in the shade in Sevilla, in the southern Spanish region of Andalusia. Picture: AFP
A worker drinks water while working in a street during a heatwave in Sevilla, in the southern Spanish region of Andalusia. Picture: AFP
A worker drinks water while working in a street during a heatwave in Sevilla, in the southern Spanish region of Andalusia. Picture: AFP

HEAT RECORD IN CHINA

In parts of Asia, record temperatures have triggered torrential rain.
Nearly 260,000 people were evacuated in southern China and Vietnam before a typhoon made landfall late Monday local time, bringing fierce winds and rain but weakening to a tropical storm by Tuesday.

The record-setting heat came as US climate envoy John Kerry met with Chinese officials in Beijing, as the world’s two largest polluters revive stalled diplomacy on reducing planet-warming emissions.

People cool off as they dance in a swimming pool in an event at a local restaurant during a heatwave in Beijing, China. Picture: Getty Images
People cool off as they dance in a swimming pool in an event at a local restaurant during a heatwave in Beijing, China. Picture: Getty Images
Pedestrians use umbrellas to shelter from the midday sun as they cross the street in downtown Tokyo as scorching heat blisters the Northern Hemisphere. Picture: AFP
Pedestrians use umbrellas to shelter from the midday sun as they cross the street in downtown Tokyo as scorching heat blisters the Northern Hemisphere. Picture: AFP

Speaking Tuesday at Beijing’s Great Hall of the People with China’s top diplomat Wang Yi, Kerry called for “global leadership” on climate issues.

The heatwaves across Europe and the globe are “not one single phenomenon but several acting at the same time,” said Robert Vautard, director of France’s Pierre-Simon Laplace climate institute.
“But they are all strengthened by one factor: climate change.”

– with AFP

Originally published as ‘War zone’: Thousands evacuated from Greek islands as fires spread

Read related topics:Climate Change

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Original URL: https://www.couriermail.com.au/technology/environment/temperatures-hit-new-highs-as-heatwaves-scorch-the-globe/news-story/f87f1efec8f026dd63536e90ec449f4b