


Wildfires threaten Greece’s tourist economy
Thousands have been evacuated, and more fires may be coming
Wildfires have destroyed thousands of hectares of forest on Greek islands, forcing the evacuation of over 30,000 tourists and locals from Corfu, Evia and Rhodes. With temperatures above 40°C (104°F), a week-long blaze caused chaos on Rhodes, where some tour operators cancelled flights until August. On Corfu and Evia holiday-makers fled luxury villas on the coast. Efthymios Lekkas, a natural-disaster expert, blamed “an unprecedented heatwave…combined with very strong winds”. Several EU countries and Turkey sent firefighters and water-dropping aircraft to join local forces. On July 25th an old Greek air-force firefighting plane crashed in Evia. With the meltemi (annual northerly winds) expected to strengthen, there may be little respite ahead.■
This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline "Grecian burn"

Beneath France’s revolts, hidden success
On many counts it is quietly doing better than other Europeans