Shocks Greek resident in Los Angeles: “Everything is destroyed, images remind the fires of Greece”

The dramatic scenes unfolding at the – giants leaving 11 dead in their path so far, over 10,000 burned houses and hundreds of thousands of people on the street describe a Greek resident of the second largest city of the USA. “There is nothing, everything is ruined,” he said features, even noting, that the shocking images and videos coming from Los Angeles are compared to the fires of Greece. CORVERSE The Greek resident, speaking to ERT, said that he is one of the lucky ones, as the fire did not come down to the neighborhood where his home is located, which he left, at the order of evacuation of the area. Instead, as many have said, it is the Greeks who have lost their homes. “One of my cousins lost two houses, hers and her daughter”, she filled out. “Houses, businesses, schools, churches, banks, restaurants… There is nothing, everything is damaged” noted describing the magnitude of the disaster. CORVERSE Very dangerous the situation “is still very dangerous”, warned yesterday, Friday (10.01.25) Diane Criswell of the federal agency for dealing with natural disasters (FEMA). “The winds faded today, (sp. yesterday) but once I received a newer weather report (…) will be strengthened again in the next few days,” he explained after a meeting at the White House. In various areas of the vast Californian city, hundreds of thousands of people were invited to leave their homes. Research into water shortages California governor, Democrat Gavin Newsome, demanded yesterday “independent and full examination” of water distribution services in the city. In particular, it criticised water supply shortages in the midst of fires, especially in the early hours and days. “We need answers,” to “know exactly what happened,” he said in an open letter. Fire Corps chief Christine Crowley on her part told KTTV television station, part of Fox News’ national network, that her service is faced with shortages of “personal, resource and capital”, not much or less denouncing the municipality that she “stood” firefighters. She insisted, in another interview, on CNN, that she has repeatedly protested officials over the $17 million budget and how “sub-funded” and “sub-funded” are firefighting: “we don’t have enough firefighters”, she whistled, while calls received by her agency have increased by 55% since 2010. The reinforcements sent will help, but in the future the fire department will need funding and support, he added. Californians are invited to save on water: reservoirs that feed fire hydrants and pumps are emptied because of the fires. Moreover, sending accidentally messages to mobile phones calling for citizens to be rushed away from their homes the day before yesterday. Thursday and yesterday Friday, causing a disturbance to the population, forced authorities to apologize. At the same time, the federal civil aviation agency (FAA) announced that it is conducting an investigation into the drone incident that caused a hole in the firefly wing. Fires in Los Angeles may prove the most expensive in history. AccuWeather estimates that damage will have value ranging from $135 billion to $150 billion.