The Borneo Post

California’s deadliest wildfire finally tamed

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LOS ANGELES: The deadliest and most destructiv­e fire in California’s history was finally brought totally under control by firefighte­rs, more than two weeks after it erupted, authoritie­s said.

The so- called Camp Fire, which broke out on Nov 8, is so far known to have killed 85 people.

The Butte County Sheriff’s department said that they had mistakenly added two people to an earlier death toll of 87. However they increased the number of missing people to 296 from 249 – still considerab­ly lower than the 474 reported missing on Friday.

“# CampFire ... is now 100 per cent contained,” Cal Fire, the state fire authority, said in a bulletin on Twitter.

Only 54 of the fatalities have been identified, according to the local sheriff’s office in Butte County, a rural area north of the state capital Sacramento.

A total of 153,336 acres were affected by the fire, with nearly 14,000 homes and hundreds of other structures destroyed.

Heavy downfalls that have soaked the fire zone in the past days helped douse the remaining f lames, but also made it more difficult for crews searching for bodies.

The Camp Fire was the second major blaze to hit California in recent weeks with a fire in the Malibu area near Los Angeles also killing three people. The smoke from the Camp Fire was so intense that schools in San Francisco had to close at one point earlier this month as did the city’s famed cable car and Alcatraz Island.

California’s governor, Jerry Brown, has warned that the state can expect a growing number of major fires as a result of global warming. — AFP

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