The Prague Post - Greek PM vows for a restart after criticism for natural disasters' handling

EUR -
AED 4.228976
AFN 73.119834
ALL 94.021967
AMD 424.002895
ANG 2.061694
AOA 1056.527737
ARS 1654.438924
AUD 1.637643
AWG 2.072745
AZN 1.956608
BAM 1.940524
BBD 2.320433
BDT 141.427884
BGN 1.947091
BHD 0.434244
BIF 3444.211275
BMD 1.151525
BND 1.475981
BOB 7.990101
BRL 5.862184
BSD 1.15213
BTN 108.888809
BWP 15.437474
BYN 3.18969
BYR 22569.89
BZD 2.317159
CAD 1.624272
CDF 2671.538139
CHF 0.920005
CLF 0.025916
CLP 1019.974636
CNY 7.781373
CNH 7.790504
COP 3955.488375
CRC 524.76893
CUC 1.151525
CUP 30.515413
CVE 109.797998
CZK 23.95408
DJF 204.648869
DKK 7.411376
DOP 67.4793
DZD 153.01346
EGP 57.470537
ERN 17.272875
ETB 182.372797
FJD 2.572162
FKP 0.85688
GBP 0.865181
GEL 3.045783
GGP 0.85688
GHS 13.009584
GIP 0.85688
GMD 84.060962
GNF 10107.509554
GTQ 8.781943
GYD 241.002785
HKD 9.024242
HNL 30.74249
HRK 7.534541
HTG 150.46551
HUF 346.205579
IDR 20437.956615
ILS 3.384545
IMP 0.85688
INR 108.599745
IQD 1508.49775
IRR 1583346.874934
ISK 143.169139
JEP 0.85688
JMD 182.215568
JOD 0.816453
JPY 184.54685
KES 149.145723
KGS 100.700587
KHR 4620.486077
KMF 489.397908
KPW 1036.372903
KRW 1740.950341
KWD 0.354783
KYD 0.960142
KZT 561.852126
LAK 25368.095524
LBP 103119.063813
LKR 385.974892
LRD 209.750083
LSL 18.648784
LTL 3.400154
LVL 0.696546
LYD 7.340995
MAD 10.645869
MDL 20.104732
MGA 4836.404941
MKD 61.13059
MMK 2417.565662
MNT 4119.380119
MOP 9.295623
MRU 46.153174
MUR 54.27165
MVR 17.802858
MWK 1999.047696
MXN 19.897811
MYR 4.680724
MZN 73.584871
NAD 18.656912
NGN 1565.060256
NIO 42.157445
NOK 11.057916
NPR 174.22099
NZD 1.988954
OMR 0.442759
PAB 1.15213
PEN 3.929591
PGK 5.052604
PHP 69.521029
PKR 320.467319
PLN 4.200383
PYG 7030.653504
QAR 4.19213
RON 5.189965
RSD 116.385846
RUB 84.02856
RWF 1713.4692
SAR 4.3204
SBD 9.282931
SCR 16.253917
SDG 691.489983
SEK 10.927914
SGD 1.476289
SHP 0.85973
SLE 28.500579
SLL 24146.907707
SOS 658.105205
SRD 42.988761
STD 23834.24258
STN 24.642635
SVC 10.08073
SYP 127.280474
SZL 18.651112
THB 37.464291
TJS 10.680124
TMT 4.041853
TND 3.352953
TOP 2.772596
TRY 53.484876
TTD 7.826389
TWD 36.340404
TZS 3022.756545
UAH 51.598556
UGX 4262.445308
USD 1.151525
UYU 46.514236
UZS 13824.057461
VES 686.350812
VND 30315.04715
VUV 137.32261
WST 3.15485
XAF 650.833528
XAG 0.016533
XAU 0.000266
XCD 3.112054
XCG 2.076436
XDR 0.810325
XOF 650.611831
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.782682
ZAR 18.81274
ZMK 10365.107498
ZMW 20.363694
ZWL 370.79058
  • CMSD

    0.0300

    22.29

    +0.13%

  • CMSC

    -0.0450

    22.32

    -0.2%

  • RBGPF

    -1.7300

    61.14

    -2.83%

  • GSK

    -0.0700

    52.15

    -0.13%

  • BCE

    -0.5400

    23.28

    -2.32%

  • BTI

    -1.8900

    59.49

    -3.18%

  • RIO

    -3.0700

    102.67

    -2.99%

  • AZN

    -0.8200

    177.89

    -0.46%

  • NGG

    -1.6000

    80.68

    -1.98%

  • RELX

    -0.7900

    32.01

    -2.47%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1600

    18.43

    -0.87%

  • BCC

    -0.7500

    70.81

    -1.06%

  • BP

    -1.0100

    40.14

    -2.52%

  • JRI

    -0.1900

    12.62

    -1.51%

  • VOD

    -0.3600

    14.53

    -2.48%

Greek PM vows for a restart after criticism for natural disasters' handling
Greek PM vows for a restart after criticism for natural disasters' handling / Photo: Sakis MITROLIDIS - AFP/File

Greek PM vows for a restart after criticism for natural disasters' handling

Faced with criticism for his alleged poor handling of the fires and floods that struck Greece this summer, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis pledged fresh funding and reforms in order to fight the "climate war".

Text size:

The promises could reinvigorate the image of his newly elected government that has been tarnished by footage of residents taking refuge on their roofs in desperate need of rescue as rising waters engulfed poorly prepared regions.

"Greece is facing a war in a time of peace," Mitsotakis said in his Thessaloniki International Fair keynote speech on Saturday.

"Over a two-week period, we experienced the worst wildfire and the worst floods in our history," he added.

"The climate crisis requires the mobilisation of the whole of society," he added on Sunday on the sidelines of the fair.

Floods devastated the fertile Thessaly plain in central Greece in early September.

The preceding storm killed 17 people, swallowed cotton crops and fruit trees and killed hundreds of thousands of animals on Greece's breadbasket.

The country was already grappling with "the biggest fire ever recorded in the EU", according to a European Commission spokesman, in the northeast region of Evros bordering Turkey.

Twenty-eight people were killed in the blaze, among them two firefighting pilots and 20 migrants in the Evros region.

It followed violent flames that ravaged the tourist islands of Rhodes and Corfu in July, with thousands of evacuations ordered.

-'Restart'-

Mitsotakis also pledged a 10 percent rebate on property tax for anyone who insures their home against natural disasters, adding he is considering making such insurance compulsory.

The Sunday daily Protothema saw these announcements as "a restart" for the government.

The conservative leader admitted a certain "confusion of responsibilities" between the state services responsible for responding to torrential rains, as well as "the frequent tendency" to shift blame to others.

"In Thessaly and Evros, I have heard the anger of the people," said the prime minister, whose New Democracy (ND) party won an absolute majority in the June parliamentary elections.

His government has since been blasted by the opposition and residents affected by the floods for the slowness of emergency services and the lack of preparedness.

Fingers were pointed at failures in cooperation between the army and civil protection in the hours following the disaster.

But the leader dismissed his critics' arguments.

Anyone who thinks that another country would have handled the storm and its extensive flooding better is "completely wrong", he said on Sunday.

- No reshuffle -

In just three months in office, the Mitsotakis has seen two of his ministers resign, including one in charge of citizen protection, because he was on holiday on an island in the Aegean Sea while fires raged.

The Greek press has speculated a cabinet reshuffle will follow local elections on October 8.

However, Mitsotakis insisted on Sunday that he had "no intention of reshuffling" the cabinet.

The Mitsotakis government bears "enormous responsibility" for the destruction caused by the extreme weather, said Effie Achtsioglou, former labour minister and candidate for the presidency of the left-wing Syriza party.

She condemned the fact that "no serious flood prevention work has been carried out".

According to a poll for the private television channel Mega, 61 percent of those questioned have a negative image of the government and 66 percent believe that the country is heading in the wrong direction.

K.Pokorny--TPP