Hara Petropoulou pleas for assistance after Storm Daniel caused widespread flooding in central Greece.
“Help,” she shouts to the anchor of a Sunday morning show. “Please help.”
Petropoulou is not alone. Thousands of other farmers are following suit.
But that is exactly what health authorities are warning against.
Dysentery, diphtheria, and malaria are just some of the infectious diseases resulting from the floods that ravaged Thessaly, the farming heartland of Greece, and livestock for much of the past week.
On Sunday, state health and veterinary officials said they had deployed dozens of special crews to collect dead livestock, taking decomposing carcasses to special incinerators to be burned.
But with dozens of villages and hamlets still stranded … all devoid of clean water and sewage, fears of further outbreaks grow.
“Authorities alone have been tasked with the cleanup of dead livestock,” said Deputy Health Minister Irini Agapidakishe on public television.
“People have to stay away from dead livestock, and those that have survived… Goats, chicken, sheep, cows even their pets have to be steered clear and away from contaminated fields.”
“The repercussions,” she said, “will be terrible.”
The looming health crisis adds to Daniel’s destruction after walls of water pounded the Thessaly plain. Officials say over a four-day period, the storm drenched the affected areas with more rainfall than London sees in a full year.
On Sunday, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis toured the region to inspect recovery operations. He was expected to announce unprecedented aid measures in a late-night address.
Locals though want more. They say the biggest but most pressing challenge is to rebuild the region to fortify it against future natural disasters and climate change. (VKR/VOA)