The secret destination of the Infanta Cristina, a Greek island: in the summer that the country burns in flames

Neither Sanxenxo nor Palma. It was clear that Cristina was not going to go through Marivent. Nor by the Ría de Pontevedra, where her father, Don Juan Carlos, haggles freely escorted by her eldest daughter, Elena. As much as we made pools, that photograph of the infanta walking through Puerto Portals with Don Felipe about to embark on the Aifos was not going to happen. Far away from Majorca, in Greece, the middle daughter of Juan Carlos I and Doña Sofía has decided to set up their summer headquarters with two of her children, Miguel and Irene. This is how the magazine publishes it Hola. It so happens that Cristina has landed on the Greek island of Spetses, far to the south of the Hellenic country, which this July has experienced a hell of fires. Greece has burned, above all, on the islands of Rhodes, Corfu and Euboea.

The publication mentions, quoting the Greek journalist Andreas Megos, that Cristina arrived on the island from Porto Heli, a tourist coastal town in the south of the country. Accompanied by Alexia and her husband, Carlos Morales, they went to the movies. Their respective children also joined the plan. In idyllic Porto Heli, Constantine of Greece had his spectacular residence. A house that he and his wife, Ana María from Denmark, sold a year before the death of Doña Sofía’s brother, last January. It was even considered that the real estate operation reached 12 million euros. Christina has thrown towards the maternal roots.

Greece is burning

Precisely this summer, the Hellenic country and the eastern Aegean Sea area are on forest alert due to the devastating fires. The level of risk has been reduced in the last few hours, thanks to the efforts of 300 firefighters and thousands of volunteers, who have worked on extinction and evacuation tasks. The forest tragedy has devastated thousands of hectares of forests, as reported by the authorities. As a result, 30,000 people evacuated, including 7,000 tourists. The hardest hit, the islands of Corfu, Rhodes and Euboea.