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Society

SYRIZA Minister Ridicules Report Mati Fire Victims Could be Saved

September 16, 2018

ATHENS – Alternate Health Minister Pavlos Polakis, who injects himself into debates on issues outside his expertise, took a shot at natural disaster expert Costas Synolakis from the Technical University of Crete for saying that the seaside village of Mati, where 99 people died in a July 23 wildfire, could have been evacuated and saved.

The ruling Radical Left SYRIZA-led coalition, which includes the pro-austerity, marginal, jingoistic Independent Greeks (ANEL) has been criticized for not having an evacuation or disaster plan in place and with independent reports claiming there was chaos in the slow response and that residents were not warned the inferno was roaring toward them.

On his Facebook page, Polakis – a surgeon who lit up a cigarette during a No Smoking Day news conference and speaks out provocatively in defending the government – said Synolakis should “clean up” a power pole outside his house from vines to avoid being electrocuted “in case of rain or fire,’ indirectly mocking the dead too. He gave the address although it wasn’t known whether that was Synokakis’ real address or how Polakis knew it.

The study, presented by Synolakis and five other experts, found that the 90 minutes between when the blaze started on Mount Penteli and when it reached Mati on the coast was long enough to evacuate the small town. Instead, in the chaos, drivers were directed into the village and many died, trapped in their cars on narrow, crowded streets as the fire and smoke covered them.’

The study, commissioned by the head of opposition New Democracy Kyriakos Mitsotakis, used simulation models developed by Japan’s Waseda University and the University of Oregon to back up its assertions.

Synolakis said authorities had underestimated the force of the initial blaze and the speed at which it was spreading and took too long to divert firefighters at a separate blaze in Kineta, west of Athens, to the Mati area northeast of the Capital.

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