Extreme weather hits Turkey: Wildfires in the west, snowfall in the northeast
It snowed all over the northeastern part of the country, over an area of about 100 km - Snowfall in Rizunda lasted almost five hours
Newsroom
Snowfall hit the plateaus of northeastern Turkey today, as firefighters battle flames 1,600 kilometers (1,600 miles) further west along the coast.
Snow fell in several provinces in eastern Anatolia, including Rizunda, Trabzon, Bayburt and Erzurum, unprecedented weather conditions in decades, Turkish media reported.
According to a journalist in the region who spoke to Agence France-Presse from Rizunda, the snowfall lasted nearly five hours: “I am 65 years old, I have spent almost all my life in Rizunda, this is the first time I have seen snow in July,” said Gendzaga Karafazlioglu.
“It snowed for about four to five hours,” he described. “The Artvin region (near the border with Georgia) was hit the hardest. In Rizunda, we used to have climatic anomalies… The older people say they have already seen snow in July 30-40 years ago, but not since then.”
Footage reported from Rizunda by the DHA news agency shows a stone house covered by more than 10 centimetres of snow.
It snowed across the northeastern part of the country, over an area about 100 kilometres long.
According to the state-run Anadolu News Agency, torrential rains hit Trabzon province and turned to snow in some parts as the air temperature recorded a big drop.
Severe bad weather arriving over the weekend: When storms will hit Attica – Warning for six regions
The main front of the system will also pass through the Athens metropolitan area with particular intensity, said Thodoris Kolydas – Nikoleta Ziakopoulou predicted that in Thessaly it will rain for almost 24 hours
Criminal liability for pollution of the marine environment
Renewal and issuance of passports with old ID cards, according to the decision of the CoE
Prosecutorial investigation into responsibility for the Violanta tragedy: What is being examined
The unknown chapel of the Three Hierarchs in Pagrati, where Alexandros Papadiamantis chanted hymns