The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Wildfires rage in sweltering California forcing thousands to flee

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LOS ANGELES: Wildfires roared across much of California, forcing thousands to evacuate homes as the most populous US state sweltered in record heat and flames menaced thousands of structures.

Some 8,000 people were sent fleeing as thousands of firefighte­rs were battling 14 large wildfires throughout the state, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, known as Cal Fire.

The Alamo fire had scorched 23,867 acres after starting in San Luis Obispo County and spreading to Santa Barbara County along the state’s central coast, officials said. That blaze, currently the state’s largest active fire located approximat­ely midway between San Francisco and Los Angeles, was 15 per cent contained, according to Cal Fire.

In Santa Barbara County some 1,000 firefighte­rs were racing to contain the Alamo fire – which prompted some 200 people in a remote area to flee – with help from water-dropping helicopter­s.

Fire containmen­t efforts were particular­ly aimed at guarding mountain peaks holding vital infrastruc­ture, according to the Los Angeles Times newspaper, such as a high-voltage line that powers neighbouri­ng cities.

More than 3,500 people had fled the Whittier fire in Santa Barbara County that started as temperatur­es hit a sizzling 110 degrees Fahrenheit, officials said.

It quickly grew to engulf some 7,800 acres and was just five percent controlled, authoritie­s told journalist­s at the Los Padres National Forest headquarte­rs.

That wildfire had destroyed 20 structures and threatened 150 more, according to Cal Fire. It ravaged much of an outdoor residentia­l education center that is also home to a local Boy Scouts chapter. All staff members who were on site of the Outdoor School at Rancho Alegre were safely evacuated, the group said in a statement.

“We have, however, lost our dear animal friends in the nature center and many of the state on site have lost most of their belongings,” the organisati­on posted on its Facebook page.

Area resident Sarah Gustafson told the LA Times that she was getting her tires changed when she saw a pillar of smoke rising and realised her six cats were trapped at home.

She rushed back and managed to save the animals, and described a sky painted orange and black and ‘flames up on the ridge.’

“It was terrifying. When I got home it was smokey with ash,” she told the paper. She then scrambled back to a Red Cross shelter parking lot where she and her cats spent the night. Most of southern California including metropolit­an Los Angeles has been in the grips of a blistering heat wave, with temperatur­es exceeding degrees.

California Governor Jerry Brown in April declared the official end of the state’s drought that lasted more than 100 five years. But he kept in place water reporting requiremen­ts, as well as bans on practices such as watering during or following rainfall and hosing off sidewalks.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? An alligator statue sits next to a home that was destroyed by the Wall Fire in Oroville, California.
— AFP photo An alligator statue sits next to a home that was destroyed by the Wall Fire in Oroville, California.
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