You do not have permission to delete messages in this group
Copy link
Report message
Show original message
Either email addresses are anonymous for this group or you need the view member email addresses permission to view the original message
to Bible-Pro...@googlegroups.com
Perilous
Times and Climate Change
Temperatures soar in eastern Europe
* From: AP
* August 25, 2011 9:44PM
OFFICIALS in the Balkans are trying to cope with a near-record
heat wave as temperatures soar across much of eastern Europe, with
wildfires raging and people fainting on the streets.
Authorities in Serbia, Montenegro, Croatia, Macedonia, Bosnia and
Albania issued heat warnings today for people to stay indoors and
drink water to avoid hyperthermia.
Doctors in Belgrade said emergency teams have received over 600
calls since Wednesday from residents feeling sick from the heat.
"People are collapsing and falling on the streets," said emergency
clinic doctor Zeljko Bacevic.
One of the hottest spots was in Montenegro, where temperatures in
the past few days reached more than 40 degC, prompting authorities
to recommend working hours be cut to skip the midday heat.
In Macedonia, authorities said people older than 60 and pregnant
women should not go to work. In Bosnia, workers' unions urged
construction companies to pull their employees from open air
construction sites.
In the central Bosnian city of Mostar, temperatures soared to
45degC on Wednesday as kids jumped on melting asphalt, leaving
their footprints in the streets.
"The only way to deal with this is in the river," said Mostar high
school student Semir Hebib. "I sleep on my balcony and in the
morning I go and sit next to or in the Neretva river till the
evening."
In the south of Bosnia, an increasing number of people are
suffering from stomach infections, doctors said.
"High temperatures are ideal for bacterial infections caused by
the consumption of spoiled food," said doctor Dijana Mamic, the
head of a hospital in the town of Livno. She said the town had
over 50 cases this week.
Montenegro and Albania are fighting several wildfires near their
capitals and on the Adriatic Sea coastline, but no major injuries
or damage have been reported.
Meteorologists say the current temperatures in the Balkans are
some 10 degrees Celsius higher that the average for this time of
year. They add that the heat wave which has arrived from northern
Africa is expected to last for several more days.