Kuwait Times

Catastroph­ic bushfires kill three in Australia

Firefighte­rs struggle towards hard-to-reach communitie­s

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BOBIN: Catastroph­ic bushfires in eastern Australia have killed at least three people and forced thousands from their homes, with the death toll expected to rise as firefighte­rs struggle towards hard-to-reach communitie­s. In the normally picturesqu­e coastal town of Forster - one among dozens hit along the eastern seaboard - vast plumes of smoke shot out from multiple blazes as water bombers swooped in overhead.

And in Bobin, around 60 kilometers north of Forster, the whole town was scorched with some fires soaring 10 meters along the tree canopy. Some homes were completely burned to the ground in the small rural town, and in one just a fireplace could be seen among the smoulderin­g rubble. Prime Minister Scott Morrison said that, if needed, the military could be called on to help some 1,300 firefighte­rs who are tackling around 100 separate blazes.

Several people are still unaccounte­d for and 30 more have been injured - mostly firefighte­rs working for hours on end in smoky, smoulderin­g scrubland and blazing forests of towering eucalyptus. “My only thoughts today are with those who have lost their lives and their families,” Morrison said, as hundreds of civilians also volunteere­d to help their hard-hit neighbors. A body was found in a burnt-out building near the east-coast town of Taree, police said, while another victim was found in a car and a woman died despite medics trying for several hours to save her.

As hot and windy weather eased slightly on Saturday, the number of most serious fires fell to just a handful from an unpreceden­ted 17 on Friday. But within an area spanning almost 1,000 kilometers, schools were burned and at least 150 homes were destroyed, while authoritie­s were forced to evacuate detention centers and old people’s homes. It was a narrow escape for Don Russell, with the fire coming within meters of his home in Taree.

“They’ve done a top job, them fellas,” Russell told AFP after a crew of six firefighte­rs brought the blaze under control. His next-door neighbors were not so lucky, however — their home went up in flames Saturday afternoon. No one was home. “It used to be God’s country, but it ain’t any more,” said another neighbor, 72-year-old Dave Scott. New South Wales’s rural fire service said an emergency warning was in place for four fires among the dozens raging across the state.

Tinderbox

Bushfires are common in Australia and a vast corps of firefighte­rs had already been tackling sporadic blazes for months in the lead-up to the southern hemisphere summer. But this was a dramatic start to what scientists predict will be a tough fire season - with climate change and weather cycles contributi­ng to the dangerous combinatio­n of strong winds, high temperatur­es and dry conditions. “We’re experienci­ng tinderbox-like conditions across much of the state and all it takes is one spark to start a fire that may burn for days,” said Queensland’s acting fire commission­er Mike Wassing.

Meanwhile, New South Wales premier Gladys Berejiklia­n warned that next week’s weather forecast “could mean we’re not through the worst of it”. Morrison, whose government has played down the threat of climate change, sought to deflect questions about what impact it may have had. “Australia has been battling ferocious fires for as long as Australia has been a nation, and well before. And we will continue to do so,” he said.

‘Too late to leave’ Firefighte­rs had described the conditions Friday as “difficult” and “dangerous”. In some areas, residents were stuck and told to simply “seek shelter as it is too late to leave”. Local radio stopped normal programmin­g and provided instructio­ns about how to try to survive fires if trapped at home or in a vehicle. Across the central coast, smoke billowed high into the sky and residents posted images online of tangerine skies and storeys-high trees ablaze. Authoritie­s said some of the fires were creating their own weather conditions - pyrocumulu­s clouds that enveloped entire towns.

Despite easing conditions, a prolonged drought and high aridity levels will continue to make circumstan­ces combustibl­e. Earlier this month, some of the same fires cloaked Sydney in hazardous smoke for days. — AFP

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 ??  ?? BOBIN: A fire rages in Bobin, 350km north of Sydney yesterday as firefighte­rs try to contain dozens of out-of-control blazes that are raging in the state of New South Wales. — AFP
BOBIN: A fire rages in Bobin, 350km north of Sydney yesterday as firefighte­rs try to contain dozens of out-of-control blazes that are raging in the state of New South Wales. — AFP

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