‘I’m a British expat in Santorini – here’s why I’m staying put despite evacuations’
‘I’m a British expat in Santorini – here’s why I’m staying put despite evacuations’
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A British expat who has lived in Santorini for 35 years has said she and her family are staying put amid the earthquake swarm until an official evacuation order is issued for their village. Mickey Baliaka told Metro ‘things are a little bit shaky’ but she has experienced more powerful tremors in the past. The massage studio owner, originally from Windsor, Berkshire, said ‘it’s almost more scary when you don’t feel one’ as the earthquake activity has become so commonplace in recent days.
![[SANTORINI, GREECE - FEBRUARY 5: Residents and tourists leave the Greek island of Santorini as fears of an impending earthquake rise following a series of tremors in Santorini, Greece on February 05, 2025. Ferries and planes are crowded with people attempting to escape the area after the ongoing seismic activity. (Photo by John Liakos/Anadolu via Getty Images)]](https://metro.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/SEI_238678151-d206.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&w=646)
Her husband, Fortis, is still working as a chef in a taverna on the Aegean island, where hundreds of undersea earthquakes have shaken the ground over the past week. ‘There’s no doom and gloom, it’s a little bit shaky but it’s not horrendous,’ Mickey said. ‘The bigger ones have been a bit further away so we don’t feel them so much. ‘There’s no damage or anything like that. A lot of people have left and there have been stories about panic but it hasn’t felt like that, a lot of people who wanted to leave have been able to leave calmly.
![[epa11878646 A traveller carries his luggage as he walks in the almost evacuated village of Fira in Santorini, Greece, 06 February 2025. The municipality of Thera (Santorini) advised the emptying of water from swimming pools, banned all construction work and forbade access to the Athinio port, except when ships are docking, due to a wave of seismic activity. More than ten earthquakes of over 4.0 magnitude have jolted the region since the night of February 4. EPA/ORESTIS PANAGIOTOU]](https://metro.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/SEI_238789293-974f.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&w=646)
‘Very understandably people with young children have left, which I definitely would have done if my children were young as well. ‘People with second homes in Athens have also left. ‘I understand it because if you’ve not had experience of earthquakes before this is quite scary.’. The mum of two, 58, who owns Holistic House on idyllic Kamari Beach, said ‘things are rattling a bit’ during the continued tremors.
![](https://metro.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/IMG-20250206-WA0001-9d92.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&w=646)
The most powerful one so far had a magnitude of 5.2, occurring at a depth of 5km between Santorini and neighbouring island Amorgos. The earthquakes have led to more than 11,000 people leaving the island by ferry and air, according to officials. So far, no official word has come to evacuate the central village of Vothonas, where the couple and son Adam, 26, are waiting it out. Mickey said: ‘At the moment it’s almost more scary when you don’t feel one because you start wondering why not?.
![[Santorini earthquake map]](https://metro.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/SEI_238761987-2457.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&w=646)
‘You hear a deep sound first and then there’s a shake. Things are rattling a little bit but nothing’s fallen off the walls or anything like that. ‘I’ve been in earthquakes before where you feel like the Earth is rolling beneath you, but at the moment it feels like we’re shaking.’. Mickey praised the government response and has also been encouraged by friends pledging to stay and help in the event of a worst case scenario.
![[SANTORINI, GREECE - FEBRUARY 5: A police cordon blocks access to an area in Santorini as earthquake fears prompt heightened safety measures in Santorini, Greece on February 05, 2025. The island has been experiencing a series of tremors, raising concerns about potential natural disasters. (Photo by John Liakos/Anadolu via Getty Images)]](https://metro.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/SEI_238678143-3ec6.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&w=646)
‘If the government advises us to leave, we will,’ she said. ‘My husband’s still working as a chef at the moment and all the seismologists, doctors and reporters are eating at the taverna. ‘It’s also a good place for old people who haven’t left to stay in contact with other people. As the seismologists are here we’ll also listen to them and go if they tell us to. ‘The Greek government has been very good, the emergency services were brought on the island very fast, the army’s here, the police are in full force, so everybody’s here.
![[This photograph shows caution tapes placed to restrict access for tourists as a precaution due to recent seismic activities in Oia village on the Greek island of Santorini on February 5, 2025. Some 7,000 people have left the island, known for its spectacular cliffside views and dormant volcano, which has been hit by hundreds of tremors since January 24, 2025, officials said. (Photo by STRINGER / AFP) (Photo by STRINGER/AFP via Getty Images)]](https://metro.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/SEI_238653512-e809.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&w=646)
‘I have a few friends who have also stayed to help if something does happen and worst comes to worst.’. Mickey described the island, where no major damage has been reported so far, as much quieter than usual. ‘It’s very quiet but I’ve lived here now for 35 years and to me it’s reminiscent of what it would be like at Christmas 20 years ago,’ she said. ‘Back then everyone would leave the island because the children were on holiday and they would go abroad and there wasn’t such a big population.
![](https://metro.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/IMG-20250206-WA0003-dee9.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&w=646)
‘The supermarkets are still open and if you had just visited the island and you were walking round the supermarket you’d think it was a normal day, you wouldn’t think there was no one here. ‘There are cars out and around and people are keeping in touch with each other. We are going out for walks and staying outside as much as we can although the weather is very cold. ‘To be outside and to be with other people is a good idea, especially for your mental health because staying inside makes you go a little bit crazy.’.
Tour guide Kostas Sakavaras is among those who have left the island, travelling to his family’s flat in Athens with his wife Veronika and their two children, aged 10 and 11. Kostas, 51, and his family left Vothonas on Sunday, with the closure of the children’s schools leaving little reason for them to tough it out. ‘There were very frequent tremors, up to eight an hour, maybe even more,’ he said.
‘They were not really strong, only minor tremors but you have this constant uneasiness because you never know how strong the next one will be. ‘There was no damage, no cracks, nothing falling off the walls but there was this anxiety about what was to come, so we just decided to pack our things and leave. ‘Once they announced the schools were closed there was no reason for us to stay, especially when we are blessed with a flat in Athens.’.