The Press

‘My babies are dead’

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The death count from a rapidly growing Northern California wildfire rose to five yesterday after two young children and their great-grandmothe­r who had been unaccounte­d for were confirmed dead.

‘‘My babies are dead,’’ Sherry Bledsoe said through tears after she and family members met with Shasta County sheriff’s deputies.

Bledsoe’s two children, James Roberts, 5, and Emily Roberts, 4, were stranded with her grandmothe­r Melody Bledsoe, 70, when walls of flames swept through the family’s rural property on Friday on the outskirts of Redding.

The three were among more than a dozen people reported missing after the furious winddriven blaze took residents by surprise and leveled several neighbourh­oods.

Shasta County Sheriff Tom Bosenko said he expects to find several of those people alive and just out of touch with loved ones. Officers have gone to homes of several people reported missing and found cars gone – a strong indication they fled.

The fire sparked on Tuesday by a vehicle in forested hills grew to 328 square kilometres. It pushed southwest of Redding, the largest city in the region, toward the tiny communitie­s of Ono, Igo and Gas Point, where scorching heat, winds and bone-dry conditions complicate­d firefighti­ng efforts.

It’s now the largest fire burning in California. The winds that aided firefighte­rs in keeping the flames from more populated areas were propelling at a frightenin­g rate in unpredicta­ble directions.

‘‘I don’t know why it’s doing what it’s doing,’’ Cal Fire Chief Steve Crawford said. ‘‘It’s burning in every direction all at the same time. It’s burning as if it’s got strong wind on it even when there’s no wind.’’

Two firefighte­rs were killed in the blaze, including a bulldozer operator who was helping clear vegetation in the wildfire’s path. He was identified yesterday as Don Ray Smith, 81, of Pollock Pines. Redding fire Inspector Jeremy Stoke was also killed, but details of his death were not released.

About 38,000 people were under evacuation orders, 5000 homes were threatened and the fire was just 5 per cent contained.

The latest tally of 500 destroyed structures was sure to rise. A count by The Associated Press found at least 300 of those structures were homes.

Meanwhile, about 160km southwest of Redding, two blazes prompted mandatory evacuation­s in Mendocino County.

The two fires, burning 50km apart, started on Saturday and were threatenin­g more than 350 buildings.

Cal Fire officials said more than 10,000 firefighte­rs were on the line, making progress on 14 large wildfires across California.

President Donald Trump issued an emergency declaratio­n for the state yesterday, allowing counties affected by wildfires to receive federal assistance.

Big fires also continued to burn outside Yosemite National Park and in the San Jacinto Mountains east of Los Angeles near Palm Springs. As of yesterday afternoon, those fires had burned more nearly 260 square kilometres. Yosemite Valley remained closed to visitors and won’t reopen until Saturday.

In the Redding area, authoritie­s were investigat­ing reports of looting in evacuated areas.

Police Chief Roger Moore said people were reportedly driving around evacuation zones and busting down doors of houses still standing. Sheriff Bosenko announced at a community meeting that authoritie­s had made their first looting arrest, a parolee. Anxious residents cheered.

About 100 law enforcemen­t officers and 260 National Guard soldiers were helping with evacuation­s and providing security in empty neighbourh­oods.

Moore was among the many who lost homes. -AP

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 ?? AP ?? Sherry Bledsoe, left, cries next to her sister, Carla, outside the sheriff’s office after hearing news yesterday that Sherry’s children, James and Emily, and grandmothe­r, Melody Bledsoe, were killed in a wildfire.
AP Sherry Bledsoe, left, cries next to her sister, Carla, outside the sheriff’s office after hearing news yesterday that Sherry’s children, James and Emily, and grandmothe­r, Melody Bledsoe, were killed in a wildfire.
 ?? AP ?? A Volkswagen Beetle scorched by a wildfire at a property in Redding, California.
AP A Volkswagen Beetle scorched by a wildfire at a property in Redding, California.

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