The Sun (Malaysia)

Scenes of ruin left in wake of Oregon fires

Firefighti­ng teams struggle to battle US West Coast blaze that have claimed at least 34 lives

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MOLALLA, OREGON: With resources stretched to the limit, weary crews fought to make progress yesterday against deadly wildfires sweeping the western United States, with a US senator who toured hard-hit Oregon saying it looked like the aftermath of World War Two firebombin­gs.

Scores of fires have burned some 1.2 million hectares in California since mid-August and another 647,500ha in Oregon and Washington state since Labor Day on Sept 7, laying waste to several small towns, destroying thousands of homes and claiming at least 34 lives.

US Senator Jeff Merkley of Oregon described driving 965km in his state to get a firsthand look at the devastatio­n, visiting refugee centres, fire control centres and towns burned by the blazes.

“That 900km, I never got out of the smoke. I remember fires in the past where I was driving and I would be in the smoke for 20 or 30 minutes - that’s a big fire. This is apocalypti­c.

“To see these towns burnt to the ground, it looks like a World War Two town hit by firebombin­g – thousands of homes destroyed, residences destroyed.”

Merkley said a lot of affordable housing was lost, including apartment buildings and mobile home parks, while some commercial districts were burned to the ground. “It’s overwhelmi­ng,“the Democratic senator added.

The West Coast wildfires have filled the region’s skies with smoke and soot. Air quality from Olympic National Park in Washington state to San Francisco was the clearest in days yesterday. Smoke levels abated enough on Wednesday that environmen­tal agencies lifted an air quality advisory for coastal Oregon and southeaste­rn Washington.

Several kilometres inland, air in the Oregon cities of Portland, Salem and Bend still registered as “hazardous” yesterday, according to a state air quality tracking site.

Kyle Sullivan, a spokesman for the US Bureau of Land Management in Medford, Oregon, said the clearing smoke has allowed more firefighti­ng to take place in the air with helicopter­s and planes dropping retardant.

“We haven’t seen a lot of significan­t fire growth (this week). It hasn’t been super windy or super hot,“Sullivan said.

The Oregonian newspaper reported yesterday that local residents said one of Oregon’s largest wildfires, the Holiday Farm Fire, was preceded by a power outage, a loud explosion and a shower of blue sparks from an electric line near where the blaze began.

Authoritie­s have not yet given an official cause for the fire, which has burned some 68,800ha since Labor Day.

Oregon is unaccustom­ed to the size and number of blazes that it has been experienci­ng, which have gained ground due to drought conditions and high winds.

With improved weather finally enabling fire crews to take the offensive, crews have worked to beat back the state’s largest blaze this season - the 76,900ha Beachie Creek fire. It was 20% contained as of yesterday morning.

Simultaneo­us fires along the West Coast have stretched the resources of Oregon, California and Washington state to their limit, particular­ly in Oregon, where fires rarely affect the normally rainfall-rich Cascade Mountains as they have this year.

Eight deaths have been confirmed in Oregon. Nearly 4,000 evacuees remained displaced, said the Red Cross. In California, 17,000 firefighte­rs were battling 25 major fires on Wednesday, as the state’s death toll stood at 25. One fire-related fatality has been confirmed in Washington state. – Reuters

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