ANKARA, Turkey — A new wildfire in Greece prompted evacuations in coastal areas south of Athens of Friday, as firefighters in neighboring Turkey remained locked in a battle to contain flames tearing through forested hillsides in the west of the country.
Wildfires that broke out in at least five locations across Turkey's Aegean coastal province of İzmir -- fueled by soaring temperatures, strong winds, and low humidity -- have killed two people, forced the evacuation of tens of thousands and damaged some 200 homes.
Forestry Minister İbrahim Yumakli said Friday that firefighters, supported by water-dropping aircraft, remained on the ground battling a deadly wildfire near the town of Odemis for a third day. Elsewhere, emergency crews worked to halt the spread of a new blaze that broke out late Thursday near the district of Buca.
The fire near Odemis claimed two lives — a forestry worker who died Thursday trying to contain the flames, and an 81-year-old resident who succumbed to smoke inhalation, according to authorities.
''Our intense air and land fight to control the fires in Odemis and Buca,'' continues, the minister said on X, without providing further details.
A wildfire that broke out Wednesday near the popular vacation destination of Cesme was contained Friday, Yumakli said. The fire prompted the evacuation of three neighborhoods and caused temporary road closures.
Fires flared on both sides of the Turkish-Syrian frontier on Friday, with a new blaze reported near the town of Dortyol in Turkey's border province of Hatay — as Syrian crews struggled to contain wildfires sweeping through Syria's coastal Latakia province.
Turkey's state-run news agency reported that the Hatay blaze broke out near a residential area and rapidly intensified due to strong winds.