
Weather extremes including heatwaves, wildfires, and floods as well as the rail disaster at Tempi have defined 2023 in Greece.
However, there was also some good news including the improvement in relations with Turkey and the resurgence of the Greek economy.
Here is a flashback to 2023 in Greece

On February 28 the worst rail disaster in Greek history occurred when a passenger train and a freight train collided in Tempi, Larissa, Thessaly, killing 57 people and injuring more than 85 others.
It was discovered that the passenger train had been allowed to proceed on the wrong track and pass signals at danger despite the presence of the freight train on the same track.
Vigils, angry protests, and clashes with the police occurred throughout Greece following the accident.

On June 14 an Italy-bound rusty, aging, overloaded fishing trawler smuggling migrants sank in international waters off the coast of Pylos, Messenia.
The boat, named Adriana, carried an estimated 400 to 750 migrants, mostly from Pakistan, Syria, Palestine, and Egypt, and some from Afghanistan. More than 100 were rescued, and 78 bodies recovered.
On July 25, two Hellenic Airforce officers were killed when a Canadair CL-215 waterbomber crashed on Evia island while it was trying to put out a wildfire.
Wildfires ravaged Greece in 2023, fueled by the hot and dry conditions caused by the heat waves.
The islands of Rhodes and Evia were particularly affected. In Rhodes, thousands of tourists were evacuated from local resorts as the wildfire burned out of control for several days.
In late August a wildfire at Evros, northeastern Greece, burned uncontrollably for weeks and was declared the biggest the EU has ever faced. It destroyed homes and caused multiple evacuations of villages and the city’s hospital.
Eighteen migrants have perished in the wildfire. Their charred bodies were discovered by firefighters in the Dadia Forest, which is a national park.

Floods followed the devasting wildfires in September. The flooding in Thessaly – Greece’s worst on record – devastated the fertile region, swept away agricultural land, roads and railways, and killed 16 people.
It was the second major flood in three years to hit Thessaly, part of a pattern of worsening extreme weather in Europe.
Commenting on the the extreme weather phenomena Greek PM Kyriakos Mitsotakis said “Greece is facing a war in a time of peace.”
On January 10, former King Constantine II, died at age 82. He was the last Greek monarch, reigning from 1964 to 1973. He was laid to rest at the former royal residence of Tatoi, north of Athens.
Mitsotakis’ New Democracy Party (ND) won a resounding victory in the parliamentary elections held on June 25. ND gets 40.55 percent, followed by SYRIZA at 17.84 percent. PASOK is at 11.85 percent with the Communist Party follows at 7.69 percent.
2023 was not just bad news

Greece and Turkey, two NATO allies with a long history of strained relations, made significant strides toward improving their ties in 2023.
In a landmark visit to Athens on December 7, 2023, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis signed a non-binding declaration of friendship and agreed to work towards doubling their bilateral trade to $10 billion (€9.3 billion).
The declaration also called for the two countries to refrain from aggressive statements and take steps to reduce military tension in the Aegean Sea.
The Greek economy experienced a period of solid growth in 2023, driven by strong consumer spending and investment. The economy expanded by an estimated 2.5 percent in 2023, compared to 2.3 percent in 2022.
According to The Economist’s 2023 analysis, which is based on five economic and financial indicators (inflation, “inflation range,” GDP, jobs, and stock market performance), Greece has achieved the highest marks in the economy among 35 primarily affluent countries this year.
In December Fitch Ratings upgraded Greece’s ratings giving the country a vote of confidence. Fitch was the fourth rating house to upgrade the investment in Greek bonds after Scope Ratings in August, DBRS in September, and S&P in October.