
A man died in a storm near Athens, Greece, as heavy rain caused flooding in several regions of mainland Greece, while a Saharan dust storm enveloped the island of Crete and turned skies orange.
Storm Damage
The base article says a man died in a storm near Athens as heavy rain caused flooding in several regions of mainland Greece. The report ties the fatality to severe weather and identifies flooding across multiple parts of the mainland.
No further details were provided about the man, the exact location near Athens, or the extent of the flooding. The article does not say how many regions were affected beyond noting several regions of mainland Greece.
Crete Under Dust
At the same time, a Saharan dust storm enveloped the island of Crete, leading to orange skies. The report describes the dust as affecting the island’s air conditions and visual environment.
A photo accompanying the report showed cars driving with headlights on in red air in Heraklion, Crete, and it was taken on April 1, 2026. The base article does not provide any additional information about health effects, transport disruption, or official warnings.
Concurrent Weather Events
The article presents the flooding near Athens and the Saharan dust over Crete as concurrent but separate weather events affecting Greece. One involved heavy rain and flooding on the mainland; the other involved dust conditions over the island.
No quotes from officials or residents are included in the base article. No duration figures are given beyond the photo date of April 1, 2026, which is identified as one day ago in the supplied key dates.
The report gives only the basic facts: a death near Athens, flooding in several mainland regions, Saharan dust over Crete, orange skies, and a photo from Heraklion showing cars with headlights on in red air.
What Happened
A man died in flooding near Athens during heavy rain.
Heavy rain caused flooding in several regions of mainland Greece.
A Saharan dust storm enveloped Crete and produced orange skies.
A photo from Heraklion, Crete, showed cars driving with headlights on in red air on April 1, 2026.