Serious indication that Attica fire was ’caused by arson’

The seaside town of Mati, east of Athens, has been the hardest-hit community - reuters via the BBC

BBC — Greece has “serious indications” that a fire that killed at least 85 people near Athens earlier this week was started deliberately, Citizen Protection Minister Nikos Toskas says.

The blaze broke out on Monday and hit coastal villages popular with tourists.

Some 60 people are still being treated in hospital, 11 in intensive care. Dozens more are missing.

Earlier, rescue workers searching a cliffside in the seaside town of Mati found more human remains.

A large number of the victims were caught close to the cliff as the flames spread rapidly, whipped up by winds as high as 120km/h (75mph). Many of the survivors were saved by the sea, but dozens of victims were unable to reach the water.

Mr Toskas also said that another fire that broke out near Athens a few hours earlier but did not cause casualties had been started intentionally.

He added that “climate conditions” in the areas affected by fire were “extreme”.

Earlier Greek Defence Minister Panos Kammenos told the BBC that illegal construction had contributed to the disaster by blocking escape routes.

Mr Kammenos was confronted by angry locals as he visited areas devastated by fires east of Athens this week.

Arriving in Mati, where many people died, Mr Kammenos was surrounded by residents who accused him of abandoning them.

Among those still missing are twin nine-year-old girls Vassiliki and Sofia Philippopoulou, who were with their grandparents near Mati at the time of the fire.