Jumat, 06 Agustus 2021

Snickers Spain pulls TV advert after homophobia accusations - BBC News

snickers bar
Getty Images

Snickers in Spain has pulled a controversial TV advert that was heavily criticised for being homophobic.

The 20-second commercial shows Spanish influencer Aless Gibaja transform into a bearded man with a low voice after eating a Snickers ice cream.

The video went viral this week, with some calling for a boycott of Snickers.

The chocolate brand has now apologised for any "misunderstanding that may have been caused" by the film.

In it, Mr Gibaja is at a beach bar with a friend where he asks a waiter for a "sexy orange juice with vitamins A, B and C".

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The waiter, looking confused, offers him the Snickers ice cream. After taking a bite, Mr Gibaja appears to transform into a bearded man.

"Better?" the friend asks. "Better," replies the man. A slogan reads: "You're not yourself when you're hungry."

The advert unleashed a wave of accusations on social media that the brand was insulting gay men.

"It is shameful and regrettable that at this point there are companies that continue to perpetuate stereotypes and promote homophobia," the State Federation of Lesbians, Gays and Bisexuals tweeted.

Spain's equality minister, Irene Montero, also joined the criticism.

"I wonder to whom it might seem like a good idea to use homophobia as a business strategy," she wrote on Twitter.

"Our society is diverse and tolerant. Hopefully those who have the power to make decisions about what we see and hear in commercials and TV shows will learn to be too."

The left-wing party Podemos noted how the advert had followed a slew of homophobic hate crimes in Spain in recent months.

"In the face of a wave of LGBTI-phobia, including attacks and even murders, Snickers can't think of a better idea than to create a trashy commercial that tells you that you are not yourself if you are effeminate," it said on Twitter.

On Thursday, Snickers Spain said it was deleting the advert and apologised for "any misunderstanding" it may have caused.

"In this specific campaign, the aim was to convey in a friendly and casual way that hunger can change your character," it said in a statement posted online.

"At no time has it been intended to stigmatize or offend any person or group."

A spokesperson for parent company Mars Wrigley said the firm wholeheartedly apologised for any harm caused by the advert and recognised that it "got it wrong".

"We take equal rights and inclusion seriously, we want a world where everybody is free to be themselves and we believe that as an employer and advertiser we have a role and a responsibility to play our part in creating that world," the firm's spokesperson added.

In 2008, a Snickers advert that featured the A-Team's Mr T calling a speed walker a "disgrace to the man race" was pulled after accusations it was offensive to gay people.

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2021-08-06 17:07:21Z
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India offers Cairn Energy $1bn refund after scrapping tax law - Financial Times

India expects to refund $1bn to UK-based Cairn Energy after it moved to scrap a retrospective tax law that unleashed bitter fights with prominent foreign investors.

The lower house of parliament on Friday approved a draft law introduced the previous day, cancelling a 2012 policy that enabled New Delhi to tax some foreign investments retrospectively. The upper house is expected to approve the law as early as next week.

New Delhi would also drop $13.5bn in outstanding claims against multinationals such as telecoms group Vodafone, pharmaceuticals company Sanofi and brewer SABMiller, now owned by AB InBev, as part of efforts to repair its damaged reputation as an investment destination.

Analysts say the legal initiative would allow New Delhi to resolve a bitter international tax battle with Cairn that has grown increasingly embarrassing for India. The UK energy group has sought in recent months to seize some of the government’s estimated $70bn worth of overseas assets.

“It’s a settlement offer masquerading as a law,” said one foreign business analyst, who requested anonymity.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government hopes the resolution of the dispute can bolster its reputation among foreign companies as it seeks new investment to revive India’s Covid-battered economy.

“We want to give a message to the investors that the country believes in the stability and certainty of taxation,” Tarun Bajaj, revenue secretary, told journalists on Friday. “Taxation is a sovereign right and can’t be taken away. But we should use it sparingly, judiciously.”

Bajaj said that about $1.2bn collected from companies under the soon to be scrapped tax provision would be refunded if the companies agreed to drop outstanding litigation, including claims for interest and penalties.

About $1bn of this would go to Cairn and $270m to other groups including Vodafone, he added.

The revenue secretary also said India would drop about a dozen pending tax cases on which no collections have been made but which are valued — along with interest and penalties — at $13.5bn

“All the demands that have been created will be nullified,” Bajaj said. But to settle, the affected companies would “agree only to accept the principal amount, and not interest or anything else.”

An international arbitration panel in December ordered New Delhi to pay Cairn $1.2bn, plus interest and costs, in relation to the 2014 seizure and sale of a 10 per cent stake in Cairn’s former Indian operation.

New Delhi’s refusal to honour the arbitration award prompted Cairn to embark on a quest to seize Indian government assets abroad, including planes of state-owned Air India, and diplomatic apartments in Paris.

Cairn, which estimated the value of the arbitral award at $1.7bn, said on Thursday it had “noted” the proposed legislation and was “monitoring the situation”. The company declined to comment on the proposed $1bn refund.

Meyyappan Nagappan, a tax lawyer who has worked with the Indian government, said: “I don’t know if there’s enough in the deal for companies to go ahead and settle”.

Speaking of the affected companies, he added: “I don’t get damages, I don’t get legal costs, I don’t even get interest on the tax, which every company that’s owed taxes gets.”

He continued: “If Cairn has an award in its favour and they’re confident of winning an appeal and being able to enforce, which they have threatened to do, they have a lot more to gain than what’s being offered in this deal.”

Cairn shares were up 7 per cent on Friday following a 27 per cent jump on Thursday.

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2021-08-06 16:48:00Z
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Afghanistan war: Taliban capture regional capital Zaranj - BBC News

Stock picture of Afghan security forces
EPA

A city in southwestern Afghanistan has become the country's first provincial capital to fall to the Taliban in recent years.

Multiple local officials said the Taliban had captured Zaranj, in Nimroz province, on Friday afternoon, in a significant blow to government forces.

The militants continue to make rapid advances in the country, as foreign troops withdraw.

They have taken swathes of countryside and are now targeting key cities.

Other provincial capitals under pressure include Herat in the west, and the southern cities of Kandahar and Lashkar Gah.

The UN's special envoy for Afghanistan, Deborah Lyons, on Friday said the war in the country had entered a "new, deadlier, and more destructive phase", with more than 1,000 civilians killed in the past month.

She warned that the country was heading for "catastrophe", and called on the UN Security Council to issue an "unambiguous statement that attacks against cities must stop now".

"To attack urban areas is to knowingly inflict enormous harm and cause massive civilian casualties. Nonetheless, the threatening of large urban areas appears to be a strategic decision by the Taliban, who have accepted the likely carnage that will ensue," she said.

City 'fell without a fight'

Taliban insurgents claimed victory in Zaranj - a major trading hub near the Iranian border - in a post shared on Twitter.

"This is the beginning, and see how other provinces fall in our hands very soon," a Taliban commander told Reuters news agency.

Pictures posted on social media showed civilians looting items from government buildings. Taliban insurgents were photographed inside the local airport and posing at the entrance to the city.

The militants made a sustained bid to seize the city after capturing surrounding districts.

But Nimroz's Deputy Governor Roh Gul Khairzad told reporters that Zaranj had fallen "without a fight".

She and other local officials complained of a lack of reinforcements from the Afghan government.

"The city was under threat for a while, but no one from the central government listened to us," Ms Khairzad said.

The last time the Taliban captured a provincial capital was in 2016, when they briefly held the northern city of Kunduz.

The militants have swept through Afghanistan in recent months, launching a major offensive to coincide with the withdrawal of US forces after 20 years of military operations. The capture of Zaranj will add to their momentum, analysts say.

Overnight, US and Afghan forces launched air strikes on the group's positions in Lashkar Gah, the capital of Helmand province.

Government troops have vowed not to lose the strategically significant city, and fighting there has been fierce. Officials have urged civilians to evacuate, with thousands trapped or fleeing for their lives.

Earlier on Friday, the director of Afghanistan's government media centre was assassinated by Taliban militants in the capital, Kabul. The Taliban said Dawa Khan Menapal had been "punished for his deeds".

US Chargé d'Affaires to Afghanistan Ross Wilson tweeted that he was "saddened and disgusted" by the killing, adding: "These murders are an affront to Afghans' human rights and freedom of speech."

Days earlier, an attack on the Afghan defence minister's house in Kabul left at least eight people dead. The minister, Bismillah Khan Mohammadi, was not at home at the time.

A map showing who's in control of Afghanistan
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2021-08-06 16:27:45Z
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Afghanistan war: Taliban capture regional capital Zaranj - BBC News

Stock picture of Afghan security forces
EPA

A city in southwestern Afghanistan has become the country's first provincial capital to fall to the Taliban in recent years.

Multiple local officials said the Taliban had captured Zaranj, in Nimroz province, on Friday afternoon, in a major blow to government forces.

The militants continue to make rapid advances in the country, as foreign troops withdraw.

They have taken swathes of countryside and are now targeting key cities.

Other provincial capitals under pressure include Herat in the west, and the southern city of Lashkar Gah, in Helmand province.

Zaranj is a major trading hub near the border with Iran. After capturing surrounding districts, the militants made a sustained bid to seize the city.

Two official sources told the BBC the city had been taken. The government has not yet officially commented.

A police spokesperson in Nimroz told Reuters news agency that the Taliban had been able to capture Zaranj because of a lack of reinforcements from the government.

The insurgents claimed victory in a post shared on Twitter.

"This is the beginning, and see how other provinces fall in our hands very soon," a Taliban commander told Reuters.

Some reports said a deal had been reached with the Taliban, allowing Afghan officials to flee to Iran with their families.

Pictures posted on social media showed civilians looting items from government buildings.

The last time the Taliban won a provincial capital was in 2016, when they briefly held the northern city of Kunduz.

The militants have swept through Afghanistan in recent months, launching a major offensive to coincide with the withdrawal of US forces after 20 years of military operations. The capture of Zaranj will add to their momentum.

The UN's special envoy for Afghanistan, Deborah Lyons, on Friday said the war in the country had entered a "new, deadlier, and more destructive phase", with more than 1,000 civilians killed in the past month.

She warned that the country was heading for "catastrophe", and called on the UN Security Council to issue an "unambiguous statement that attacks against cities must stop now".

Earlier on Friday, the director of Afghanistan's media and information centre was assassinated by Taliban militants in the capital, Kabul. The Taliban said Dawa Khan Menapal had been "punished for his deeds".

US Charge d'Affaires to Afghanistan Ross Wilson tweeted that he was "saddened and disgusted" by the killing, adding: "These murders are an affront to Afghans' human rights and freedom of speech."

Days earlier, an attack on the Afghan defence minister's house in Kabul left at least eight people dead.

A map showing who's in control of Afghanistan
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2021-08-06 14:31:55Z
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Greece battles wildfires near Athens and on Evia island - BBC News

Evia residents watching wildfires, 5 Aug 21
Getty Images

Greece carried out mass evacuations overnight in the northern suburbs of Athens and on the nearby island of Evia as wind whipped up huge wildfires.

Thousands had to leave their homes near Athens and 600 left Evia by boat. Acrid smoke hangs over the Greek capital.

Gale-force winds are forecast to fan the many blazes. Firefighters from France, Switzerland, Sweden, Cyprus and Romania are assisting Greece.

Wildfires are also raging in North Macedonia and southwestern Turkey.

North Macedonia has declared a state of emergency, and there are several blazes in neighbouring Albania and Bulgaria. The fires began spreading in the region in late July.

A fire that flared up in the north Athens suburb of Varybobi gained strength on Thursday and spread to adjacent areas, near Mount Parnitha, the Kathimerini newspaper reported.

Further east, residents of Vothonas and Marathon were told to head to the coast on Friday as wildfires spread along several fronts.

Dozens of homes have been destroyed or damaged. No deaths have been reported, but several dozen injured people are now in hospital.

"If some people still doubt if climate change is real, let them come and see the intensity of phenomena here," Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said.

Climate change increases the risk of the hot, dry weather that is likely to fuel wildfires. Greece has had a week of temperatures above 40C (107 Fahrenheit) and vegetation is bone-dry.

The world has already warmed by about 1.2C since the industrial era began and temperatures will keep rising unless governments around the world make steep cuts to emissions.

In Kourkoloi on the island of Evia resident Ioannis Aslanis told AFP news agency "it's a disaster, everything burnt in the village".

The heatwave has also made Turkey's wildfires the most intense on record - the fires have killed eight people, injured several hundred and forced thousands of residents and tourists to flee.

On Thursday firefighters managed to prevent the flames reaching a coal-fired power station at Kemerkoy, in Mugla province. The province, which includes the resort of Marmaris, has seen 55,000 hectares of forest engulfed by flames. Fires swept across the hills behind Marmaris.

Critics have accused President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government of failing to prepare adequately for such a disaster. They say Turkey's response was too slow and firefighters were under-resourced.

Mr Erdogan however described these as Turkey's worst-ever wildfires, and the government accused the Turkish Aeronautical Association of failing to update its aircraft.

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2021-08-06 10:16:48Z
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Iran news LIVE: 'Butcher of Tehran' warned of imminent attack as oil tanker row explodes - Daily Express

Today Elbit’s London HQ, at 77 Kingsway, Holborn, has been shut down as Palestine Action activists occupy the site. 

Elbit Systems Ltd. is an Israel-based international defense electronics company that supplies security programs throughout the world.

The London HQ has been targeted repeatedly since Palestine Action launched and is the hub of Elbit’s UK operations, from which their manufacturing of Israeli arms operates.

Activists began occupation of the site at 10am, then scaled the building to the entrance overhang, and have sprayed premises in blood-red paint.

On-site activists have been joined by on-street protestors, including drummers.

This protest is in the same week of Palestine Action’s 1 year anniversary, having shut down Elbit sites and those of its drone-parts-supplier APPH for a combined 105 days of the year.

The aim of the protests is to to end the supply of UK made arms, drones, munitions and military technology to Israel.

This tech, manufactured at Elbit’s 10 sites across the UK, is sold to Israel to harm Palestinian people.

Elbit say their eqipment is “battle-tested” on Palestinian civilians, before being sold on the global market to some of the world’s most repressive regimes.

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2021-08-06 09:54:00Z
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Deadly wildfires in Greece and Turkey force thousands of people to evacuate their homes - Daily Mail

Deadly wildfires in Greece and Turkey force thousands of people to flee their homes as relentless heatwave continues to spark new blazes which threaten historic Olympia and Athens

  • 200 firefighters, 50 fire trucks, six helicopters and water-bombing planes were sent to Olympia last night
  • Thousands more people were fleeing to safety as a wildfire north of Athens threatened homes and power lines
  • On Evia island, the Greek coast guard rallied a flotilla of boats to evacuate hundreds of stranded residents
  • In Turkey, eight people have been killed in the fires sparked by the worst heatwave in living memory 
  • Last night, Greek PM Kyriakos Mitsotakis told the nation it was witnessing 'the reality of climate change'
  • Find out the latest Tokyo Olympic news including schedule, medal table and results right here

Deadly wildfires in Greece and Turkey have forced thousands of people to flee their homes as a relentless heatwave continues to spark infernos in tinder-dry forests.

Firefighters last night battled to bring under control two massive blazes which raged near the ancient site of Olympia, on the western Peloponnese peninsula, and on the island of Evia, around 100 miles north of Athens. 

Around 200 firefighters, 50 fire trucks, six helicopters and water-bombing planes were sent to douse fires encircling the archeological site where the Olympics were first held in 776 B.C.

Thousands more people were fleeing to safety as a wildfire north of Athens caused the shutdown of major motorways as firefighters sought to prevent the blaze from reaching houses, power plants and historic sites.

On Evia, the Greek coast guard rallied an flotilla of patrol boats and private vessels to evacuate hundreds of residents and vacationers by sea after several fires combined to block land routes off the island. 

In Turkey, eight people have been killed in the fires which have ripped through the country's southwestern coastal regions, forcing the evacuation of tens of thousands of people including tourists and briefly threatening to engulf a power plant.   

GREECE: People swim in the sea off the island of Evia, north of Athens, on Tuesday as a fire rages in the hills above their coastal villas. The Greek coast guard rallied an flotilla of patrol boats and private vessels to evacuate hundreds of residents and vacationers by sea after several fires combined to block land routes off the island.

GREECE: People swim in the sea off the island of Evia, north of Athens, on Tuesday as a fire rages in the hills above their coastal villas. The Greek coast guard rallied an flotilla of patrol boats and private vessels to evacuate hundreds of residents and vacationers by sea after several fires combined to block land routes off the island.

TURKEY: A rescuer carries an old woman away from her home as the Milas district of Mugla province was evacuated due to fires

TURKEY: A rescuer carries an old woman away from her home as the Milas district of Mugla province was evacuated due to fires 

TURKEY: A helicopter dumps water onto the burning forests in Mugla. In coastal Mugla province, where the tourist destinations of Bodrum and Marmaris are located, fires continued to burn in three areas on Friday, officials said.

TURKEY: A helicopter dumps water onto the burning forests in Mugla. In coastal Mugla province, where the tourist destinations of Bodrum and Marmaris are located, fires continued to burn in three areas on Friday, officials said.

GREECE: An aircraft drops water during a wildfire in Kryoneri area, northern Athens on Thursday

GREECE: An aircraft drops water during a wildfire in Kryoneri area, northern Athens on Thursday

GREECE: A firefighter douses flames from the top of a truck as a fire spreads around the village of Afidnes, some 20 miles north of Athens

GREECE: A firefighter douses flames from the top of a truck as a fire spreads around the village of Afidnes, some 20 miles north of Athens

Deadly wildfires in Greece and Turkey have forced thousands of people to evacuate their homes as a relentless heatwave continues to spark infernos in tinder-dry forests

Deadly wildfires in Greece and Turkey have forced thousands of people to evacuate their homes as a relentless heatwave continues to spark infernos in tinder-dry forests

In coastal Mugla province, where the tourist destinations of Bodrum and Marmaris are located, fires continued to burn in three areas on Friday, officials said. Blazes in Marmaris were largely contained by Friday, according to its mayor. Fires also raged in some districts of Antalya province, another tourism spot.

Mamaris hit a record 114F (45.5C) this week amid growing evidence of what scientists say is man-made climate change. 

Strong winds drove one of the fires toward the compound of the coal-fueled Kemerkoy power plant near the town of Milas, in Mugla province late on Wednesday, forcing nearby residents to flee in navy vessels and cars. It was contained on Thursday after raging for some 11 hours and officials said its main units were not damaged.

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis last night gave a televised address to lament 'the reality of climate change' as he vowed that his government was doing everything in its power to prevent loss of life and damage to property.

'Unfortunately, under these circumstances, achieving all these aims at the same time is simply impossible,' he added.   

Several firefighters and volunteers were hospitalized with burns, health officials said. 

Health Minister Vassilis Kikilias said nine people had been taken by ambulance to hospitals in Athens from the fire north of the Greek capital, three of them suffering breathing problems, while 11 more were being treated in a health center on Evia.

'We are going through the 10th day of a major heat wave affecting our entire country, the worst heat wave in terms of intensity and duration of the last 30 years,' Fire Service Brig. Gen. Aristotelis Papadopoulos said. 

GREECE: Firemen battle to extinguish a wildfire in the area of Skepasti in Evia island

GREECE: Firemen battle to extinguish a wildfire in the area of Skepasti in Evia island

GREECE: A desperate battle to save Greek villages continued through the night with those who did not flee helping emergency crews

GREECE: A desperate battle to save Greek villages continued through the night with those who did not flee helping emergency crews

GREECE: Some residents of Afidnes, around 30km (18.6miles) north of Athens stayed behind to assist emergency crews as fires ravaged tree-covered hills into the night

GREECE: Some residents of Afidnes, around 30km (18.6miles) north of Athens stayed behind to assist emergency crews as fires ravaged tree-covered hills into the night

GREECE: Emergency services lined the streets as enormous flames lit up the night in an orange glow

GREECE: Emergency services lined the streets as enormous flames lit up the night in an orange glow

GREECE: A burnt hotel during a wildfire in Lalas village, near Olympia town, western Greece, Thursday

GREECE: A burnt hotel during a wildfire in Lalas village, near Olympia town, western Greece, Thursday

GREECE: A burnt hotel during a wildfire in Lalas village, near Olympia town, western Greece, Thursday

GREECE: A burnt hotel during a wildfire in Lalas village, near Olympia town, western Greece, Thursday

GREECE: A wildfire approaches the Olympic Academy in ancient Olympia in western Greece on Wednesday night

GREECE: A wildfire approaches the Olympic Academy in ancient Olympia in western Greece on Wednesday night

At least three significant fires were burning, on the island of Evia, in southern Greece and on the outskirts of Athens where a major forest blaze rekindled, and at Olympia where people have been ordered to evacuate. No deaths or severe injuries have been reported, but there has been widespread destruction to buildings and to Greece's quick-shrinking forests

At least three significant fires were burning, on the island of Evia, in southern Greece and on the outskirts of Athens where a major forest blaze rekindled, and at Olympia where people have been ordered to evacuate. No deaths or severe injuries have been reported, but there has been widespread destruction to buildings and to Greece's quick-shrinking forests

In the Drosopigi area north of Athens, resident Giorgos Hatzispiros went Friday morning to check on his house after being ordered to evacuate the previous afternoon. Only the charred walls of the single-story home remained, along with his two children's bicycles, somehow unscathed in a storeroom. Inside, smoke rose from a still-smoldering bookcase.

'Nothing is left,' Hatzispiros said. He urged his mother, who was accompanying him, to leave, to spare her the sight of their destroyed home.

In southern Greece, nearly 60 villages and settlements were evacuated Thursday and early Friday, with weather conditions expected to worsen as strong winds were predicted in much of the country.

Fires were raging on the island of Evia, northeast of Athens, and at multiple locations in the southern Peloponnese region where a blaze was stopped before reaching monuments at Olympia, birthplace of the ancient Olympic Games.

A summer palace outside Athens once used by the former Greek royal family was also spared. 

TURKEY: Health officials help out people to be evacuated due to approaching fire that broke out in Milas district of Mugla province on Thursday

TURKEY: Health officials help out people to be evacuated due to approaching fire that broke out in Milas district of Mugla province on Thursday

TURKEY: Ground and aerial fire extinguishing operations continue to contain the fire in Milas district of Mugla

TURKEY: Ground and aerial fire extinguishing operations continue to contain the fire in Milas district of Mugla

TURKEY: Flames illuminate the sky as people in Yumakli area evacuated due to an approaching fire in Mugla's Mentese district

TURKEY: Flames illuminate the sky as people in Yumakli area evacuated due to an approaching fire in Mugla's Mentese district

TURKEY: A Turkish volunteer runs as they head to fight wildfires in Turgut village, near tourist resort of Marmaris, Mugla

TURKEY: A Turkish volunteer runs as they head to fight wildfires in Turgut village, near tourist resort of Marmaris, Mugla

TURKEY: People watch an advancing fire that rages Cokertme village, near Bodrum

TURKEY: People watch an advancing fire that rages Cokertme village, near Bodrum

TURKEY: Ground and aerial fire extinguishing operations continue to contain the fire in Milas district of Mugla

TURKEY: Ground and aerial fire extinguishing operations continue to contain the fire in Milas district of Mugla

TURKEY: Ground and aerial fire extinguishing operations continue to contain the fire in Milas district of Mugla

TURKEY: Ground and aerial fire extinguishing operations continue to contain the fire in Milas district of Mugla

In Evia, the coast guard said its patrol boats, private vessels and tourist boats had evacuated 631 people overnight and by early Friday morning from beaches on the northeastern coast of the island. Coast guard patrols were continuing along the coast.

Fire crews, water-dropping planes, helicopters and vehicles from France, Romania, Sweden and Switzerland were arriving Friday and through the weekend to help. Fire crews and planes from Cyprus were already in Greece, as the European Union stepped up support to fire-hit countries in southeast Europe.

More than 1,000 firefighters, joined by the army and teams of volunteers, as well as nearly 20 water-dropping planes and helicopters were fighting five major fires across the country, the fire department said.

A heatwave described as Greece's worst since 1987 has baked the country for more than a week, sending temperatures spiralling to 45 degrees Celsius (113 F) and creating tinder-dry conditions in shrubland and forests.

Nearby countries are battling similar conditions, fuelling wildfires in North Macedonia and blazes in Italy and across the Mediterranean region.

Officials in Albania said one person died of smoke inhalation this week near the southern city of Gjirokaster. 

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2021-08-06 09:05:35Z
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