Tag: Europeans

  • Europe’s vacation areas to see second heat wave of 47 degrees next week

    Europe’s vacation areas to see second heat wave of 47 degrees next week

    There won’t be any relief from the heatwave that Europeans and British tourists are currently experiencing on the continent.

    After an anticyclone system named Cerberus advanced northward, warnings for imminent danger to life are already being issued for several European countries owing to the intense heat.

    However, once Cerberus exhausts itself, Italian meteorologists now anticipate that a second heatwave, known as Charon, will take its place.

    This could push temperatures back up to 43°C in Rome and as high as 47°C in Sardinia, The MailOnline reports.

    Cerberus – named after Hades’ three-headed dog in Greek mythology – will see temperatures rise to above 45°C in Spain, Italy, Greece and Turkey by the end of next week. 

    The Italian islands of Sardinia and Sicily are set to bear the brunt of the unforgiving heat, with the BBC claiming temperatures could reach 48.8°C. 

    In Athens today, rescue workers had to rescue tourists from the Acropolis as temperatures climbed.

    On Tuesday the death of a 44-year-old street painter in Lodi, Italy was believed to be heat related – as was the drowning of two children in Manfredonia, who were believed to be seeking relief from the heat.

    The ground temperature in parts of southern Spain reached upwards of 60°C, with the European Space Agency warning continental records could be broken next week.

    Health ministry officials have issued red alert warnings for ten major cities in Italy, including Florence and Rome.

    A red alert warning means the heat is so intense that it poses a health risk to the whole population – not just vulnerable groups.

    Italian politician Nicola Fratoianni said: ‘We are facing an unbearable heatwave. Dying from the heat is unthinkable – we should be taking measures to avoid tragedies like this in the hottest hours of the day.’

    Carlo Cacciamani, head of Italy’s national meteorological and climatology agency, said the unusually hot weather hitting the country is because the Cerberus anticyclone has pushed out a colder weather system from the Azores which usually influences summer weather in Italy. 

    ‘This is happening more frequently and means we see temperatures around 40°C instead of the normal 30-31°C,’ Cacciamani told The Times. 

    ‘The world just had the hottest week on record, according to preliminary data,’ the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said, with high temperatures having ‘potentially devastating impacts on ecosystems and the environment’.

    Research published on Monday found that more than 61,000 people died due to the heat during Europe’s record-breaking summer last year.

    Most people who died were over the age of 80, and about 63% of those who died due to the heat were women, according to the research published in the journal Nature Medicine.

  • Europeans in custody in Iran freed after prisoner swap

    Europeans in custody in Iran freed after prisoner swap

    Austrian officials have expressed their relief following the release of two Austrian-Iranian dual nationals who had been imprisoned in Iran for several years.

    Kamran Ghaderi and Massud Mossaheb were freed as part of a prisoner swap arrangement that involved European nations and an Iranian diplomat.

    The detention of Ghaderi and Mossaheb had drawn international criticism. Additionally, Belgium confirmed the release of a Danish citizen as part of the swap.

    The trio is now flying into Belgium. Austrian Foreign Minister Alexander Schallenberg expressed his relief on Twitter, emphasizing the end of their arduous imprisonment, while Chancellor Karl Nehammer stated that their prolonged suffering has now come to an end.

    Kamran Ghaderi was arrested in Iran in 2016 on spying charges and was sentenced to ten years in prison, with his family asserting that his confession was coerced.

    Massud Mossaheb, believed to be in his 70s, was arrested in Tehran in 2019 and was sentenced for vague national security offenses, as noted by Amnesty International.

    Ghaderi spent 2,709 days in confinement, while Mossaheb spent 1,586 days.

    The Danish national released in the swap has not been identified.

    The earlier prisoner exchange between Belgium and Iran involved the release of Belgian aid worker Olivier Vandecasteele and Iranian diplomat Assadollah Assadi.

    Vandecasteele had spent 455 days in prison after being convicted of espionage and other charges, which he denied. Assadi, on the other hand, was convicted in Belgium in 2021 on terrorism charges related to a failed bomb plot in France and had been sentenced to 20 years in prison.

    The release of the Austrian-Iranian citizens was announced on Friday following mediation talks facilitated by Oman, which had also brokered the previous prisoner exchange.

    Austrian Foreign Minister Schallenberg described the day as “very emotional” after years of discreet diplomatic efforts and expressed gratitude to the Austrian embassy in Tehran, as well as his Belgian and Omani counterparts.