Marlborough Express

Wildfires ravage southern California

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UNITED STATES: A wildfire erupted in Los Angeles’ exclusive Bel-Air suburb yesterday as yet another part of Southern California found itself under siege from an outbreak of wind-whipped blazes that have consumed multimilli­on-dollar houses and tract homes alike.

Hundreds of homes across the LA metropolit­an area and beyond are feared destroyed since Tuesday, but firefighte­rs are only slowly managing to make their way into some of the hard-hit areas.

As many as five fires have closed highways, schools and museums, shut down production of TV series and cast a hazardous haze over the region. About 200,000 people are under evacuation orders, but no deaths and only a few injuries have been reported.

From the beachside city of Ventura, where rows of homes were razed, to the rugged foothills north of Los Angeles, where stable owners had to evacuate horses in trailers, to Bel-Air, where the rich and famous have sweeping views of LA below, fierce Santa Ana winds sweeping in from the desert have fanned the flames and fears.

Air tankers that had been grounded because of high winds went up yesterday, dropping flame retardant. Firefighte­rs rushed to attack the fires before the winds picked up again. They are expected to gust as high as 130kmh at night.

Before dawn, flames exploded on the steep slopes of Sepulveda Pass, closing a section of heavily travelled Interstate 405 and burning at least four homes in Bel-Air. Helicopter­s dropped water on hillside homes to protect them from the 60-hectare blaze.

Bel-Air was the site of a catastroph­ic fire in 1961 that burned nearly 500 homes. Burt Lancaster and Zsa Zsa Gabor were among the celebritie­s who lost their houses.

Across the wide freeway from the fire, the Getty Centre art complex was closed to protect its collection from smoke damage. Many schools across Los Angeles cancelled classes because of poor air quality. Production of HBO’s Westworld and the CBS show SWAT were suspended because of the danger to cast and crew from two nearby fires.

In Ventura County northwest of LA, the biggest and most destructiv­e of the wildfires grew to 262 square kilometres and had nearly reached the Pacific Ocean after starting 48km inland a day earlier.

– AP

Abbott fails to kill bill

Former Australian prime minister Tony Abbott has failed in his bid to effectivel­y kill off legislatio­n allowing same-sex couples to marry. Abbott’s amendment to the bill before parliament was shut down yesterday, allowing it to proceed to the final stages of becoming law after it passed the Senate last week without amendment. Abbott said he moved the amendment ‘‘out of respect for the millions of Australian­s who take religious freedom seriously’’, but ‘‘out of respect for the millions who want the SSM bill swiftly passed, I chose not to divide on it’’.

Terror accused in court

An alleged Islamist terrorist has appeared in court accused of a plot to bomb the gates of Downing Street and assassinat­e British Prime Minister Theresa May. Naa’imur Rahman, 20, is accused of planning to detonate a homemade explosive device before storming No 10 armed with a knife and suicide vest. He has been charged with preparing acts of terrorism, and appeared at Westminste­r magistrate­s’ court yesterday alongside Mohammed Imran, 21, who is accused of trying to join Islamic State. Rahman, of Finchley, north London, is also charged with assisting Imran in planning terrorism. Imran, from the Sparkbrook area of Birmingham, is charged in relation to his alleged intention to join Isis in Libya.

Cuba blames noisy crickets

American and Canadian diplomats in Havana may have been made ill by a cacophony of chirping crickets, not by a mysterious sonic weapon, a panel of Cuban scientists says. The conclusion is endorsed by some United States scientists, though an investigat­ion is being led by the FBI into the brain injuries suffered by some diplomats. The diplomats were withdrawn in August after they complained of suffering nausea, hearing loss and concussion-like symptoms. There was speculatio­n that a sonic weapon had been used, a ploy reminiscen­t of the Cold War, when the US embassy in Moscow was bombarded with microwaves. Cuba asked its scientists to study the problem and also invited the FBI and Canadian authoritie­s to investigat­e.

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