
Thousands of inhabitants are running away from the island of Santorini, Greece, in the wave of earthquake activities.
According to local media, about 6,000 people left the island from Sunday.
In the last 48 hours, more than 300 earthquakes have been recorded near the island, and some experts say that progress can continue for several weeks. The authorities closed the school all week and warned of large indoor meetings, but Prime Minister Kiria Cos Mitotaki urged calm.
Santorini is a popular tourist destination for white buildings, but since February is outside the peak tourist season, most of the buildings are locals.
At the beginning of Tuesday, some progress in the northeast of Santorini was recorded northeast of Santorini.
There has been no significant damage so far, but emergency measures have been taken by preventive measures.
Hundreds of people waited from the port to the port early on Tuesday morning.
The 18 -year -old local resident told Reuters before boarding the ship, “Everything was closed, no one worked.
According to AEGEAN AIRLINES, in addition to 6,000 people who have left Perry from Sunday, 2,500 to 2,700 passengers will fly from Santorini to Athens on Monday and Tuesday.
The airline said that it added three emergency flights to the schedule along with the space for hundreds of passengers at the request of the climate crisis and the Civil Protection Ministry.
Santorini is a small island with a population of 15,500. Welcome millions of tourists every year.
Kostas Sakavaras, a tour guide in Santorini for 18 years, left the island with his wife and children on Monday.
“We thought it was a better choice to come to the mainland for preventive measures,” the BBC News said.
“Nothing has fallen or nothing is similar,” he added. Sakavaras, who plans to return home when the school opens again, said, “This is the scariest part.
The school will be closed on the island by Friday. The authorities also warned people to avoid the island’s specific areas and empty the pool.
Prime Minister Mitsutaki said on Monday that Greece is trying to manage “very intense geological phenomena.”
Earthquake scholars consider recent tremors, but if the earthquake is larger, preventive measures have been implemented.
Emergency services warned the residents to leave the Ammoudi, Armeni and Old Port of Fira due to landslides.
The South Airji regional firefighting bureau was placed on a general alarm, a rescue team was dispatched, and the crew was standing with a watch stand by a large yellow medical tent on the island.
Santorini is known as the Greek Volcanic Arc, a chain of volcanoes, but the last major eruption was in the 1950s.
The Greek authorities said the recent trembling is related to the crustal movement instead of volcanic activity.









