Hundreds of firefighters were struggling yesterday to contain dozens of outbreaks, including several that have burned out of control for days and forced widespread evacuations, in the second deadly wave of blazes in Greece in a month.
The bodies were found near a shack in the Avanta area north of the city of Alexandroupolis near Greece's borders with Turkey and Bulgaria, authorities said, and a disaster victim identification team was working to identify them.
A fire service spokesperson, Ioannis Artopios, said that since no reports of missing people had been filed in the area, where a major forest fire has been burning for four days, it was possible the victims were migrants who had entered from Turkey.
The discovery brings the overall toll from this week's fires in Greece to 20 after the body of another person thought to be a migrant was found in the same area on Monday and an elderly shepherd was found dead at the site of a blaze north of Athens.
Local media described a "massive wall of flames" racing through forests towards Alexandroupolis overnight, prompting authorities to evacuate another eight villages on top of the dozen whose inhabitants had already been ordered to leave.
This story is from the August 23, 2023 edition of The Guardian.
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This story is from the August 23, 2023 edition of The Guardian.
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