A remarkably stronger DANA than the one that has wreaked havoc in Spain ravages Greece. 800 liters per square meter have already fallen and forecasts say that it can exceed 1,000. If that happened, we would be talking about an amount that multiplies by 10 the amount deposited in Toledo in recent days.

For the moment, at least one person has died and another remains missing due to the scourge in Greece of the storm ‘Daniel’, which has left heavy rains in the central area of ​​the country. In the city of Volos, one of the most affected, a 70-year-old farmer has died buried by a wall that collapsed due to a landslide.

Also looking for a second person another male who was allegedly swept away by a streamaccording to a spokesman for the Fire Department quoted by the ERT television network.

The stamp left by this phenomenon, as can be seen in the main video of this news story, is overwhelming: overturned trucks, dragged trees that block roads and incessant torrents of water. In fact, these torrential rains have caused roadblocks, flooded houses and businesses, and even a hospital has been flooded.

Daniel is expected to break a record of rainfall never seen before in eastern Greece, so the authorities have prohibited the movement of vehicles in some areas, while the general recommendation is to avoid risks. The emergency service has asked the inhabitants of Volos, Thessaloniki, Larisa, Euboea and Katerini to restrict non-essential movements.

The Greek prime minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, has recognized in a meeting with the president, Katerina Sakellaropoulou, that it is “extremely difficult” to face a storm of this magnitude without the cooperation of the citizenry.

Greece, he explained, faces a “completely extreme” phenomenonTherefore, for the Prime Minister it is essential that all people follow the guidelines set by Civil Protection based on the evolution of the situation. Meteorologists anticipate that the weather conditions will continue to be difficult until next Thursday, with special concern for what may happen in the central zone of Greece but also in the Peloponnese peninsula, in the south.