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Mayor of Santorini says recent earthquakes are part of a 'seismic swarm' that could last weeks

An empty swimming pool is seen in a group of clifftop buildings in the town of Oia on the earthquake-struck island of Santorini, Greece.
An empty swimming pool is seen in a group of clifftop buildings in the town of Oia on the earthquake-struck island of Santorini, Greece. Copyright AP Photo/Petros Giannakouris
Copyright AP Photo/Petros Giannakouris
By Euronews with AP
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Residents have been warned to avoid indoor gatherings, check escape routes, stay away from cliffs and to drain swimming pools to reduce potential structural damage to buildings in the event of a large earthquake.

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The Mayor of Santorini has said the hundreds of earthquakes that have hit Greek islands on the Aegean Sea are a “seismic swarm" and could continue for weeks before eventually diminishing.

“This phenomenon may play out with small quakes or a single, slightly stronger one, followed by gradual subsidence," said Mayor Nikos Zorzos, adding he was cautiously optimistic after speaking to seismologists who described the swarm as a series of tremors of similar magnitude occurring in clusters.

Emergencies rescue crews have been deployed to the Greek volcanic island after hundreds of quakes with magnitudes between 3 and 4.9 have been registered since Saturday between Santorini and the nearby island of Amorgos.

Authorities sent rescuers with a sniffer dog and drones to Santorini, where they set up tents in a basketball court next to the island’s main hospital as a staging area. Push alerts have been sent to mobile phones warning people to stay away from areas where rock slides could occur, and banning access to some coastal areas.

Hundreds of people have fled the island and schools on Santorini, as well as the nearby islands of Anafi, Amorgos and Ios have been ordered to remain shut all week.

Precautions were also ordered on several nearby Aegean Sea islands - all popular summer vacation destinations - after more than 200 undersea earthquakes were recorded in the area over the past three days.

Government officials met with scientists throughout the weekend and on Monday to assess the situation.

“We have a very intense geological phenomenon to handle,” Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said from Brussels, where he was attending a European meeting. "I want to ask our islanders first and foremost to remain calm, to listen to the instructions of the Civil Protection (authority)."

People wait for the arrival of a ferry to Athens' port of Piraeus after fleeing the Greek island of Santorini.
People wait for the arrival of a ferry to Athens' port of Piraeus after fleeing the Greek island of Santorini.AP Photo/Petros Giannakouris

While Greek experts say the quakes are not linked to Santorini’s volcano, they acknowledge that the pattern of seismic activity is cause for concern.

“These measures are precautionary, and authorities will remain vigilant,” Civil Protection Minister Vasilis Kikilias said late Sunday following an emergency government meeting in Athens. “We urge citizens to strictly adhere to safety recommendations to minimise risk.”

Santorini lies along the Hellenic Volcanic Arc, which stretches from the Peloponnese in southern Greece through the Cycladic islands.

There are two volcanoes in the area: Nea Kameni, an islet within Santorini’s caldera; and Kolumbo, a submarine volcano about 8 kilometres northeast of Santorini.

“What we must realise is that the Santorini volcano produces very large explosions every 20,000 years,” Efthymios Lekkas, seismologist and head of the scientific monitoring committee for the Hellenic Volcanic Arc, said last week.

“It’s been 3,000 years since the last explosion, so we have a very long time ahead of us before we face a big explosion.”

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