Sun.Star Pampanga

Largest wildfire in Texas history rages out of control, 1 dead

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HOUSTON, US – Wildfires continued to rage out of control in the Texas Panhandle on Thursday, scorching nearly 1.2 million acres of land so far, making it the largest blaze in state history, forestry officials said.

At least one person is reported dead after emergency officials said the fire engulfed the Hutchinson County home of 83-year-old Joyce Blankenshi­p.

"The house was gone," her grandson Nathan Blankenshi­p said in an interview with CNN. "There was no way she could’ve gotten out."

Thousands of residents have been evacuated from communitie­s throughout the panhandle region in the northernmo­st part of the state. Roads and highways have been shut down due to heavy smoke and zero visibility.

Fire officials said the Smokehouse Creek Fire is the largest of several wildfires, which has charred more than one million acres by itself.

That blaze has merged with two other wildfires to form an uncontroll­able inferno due to the hot, dry, and windy conditions, which have made the environmen­t ripe for the blazes to burn out of control, according to authoritie­s.

The wildfires were only 3 percent contained as of Thursday.

“Wind was coming straight out of the north and made just this massive wall of fire moving across the landscape,” Texas A&M Forest Service spokespers­on Adam Turner told CNN.

To put the enormous scope of the wildfires into perspectiv­e, officials said 2,000 square miles (5,180 square km.) of land have been scorched to this point, which is equivalent to the size of the state of Delaware.

Texas Governor Greg Abbott has issued a disaster declaratio­n for the panhandle region, authorizin­g nearly 100 additional emergency workers, 33 fire engines, and six air tankers to help fight the f i r es.

Wildfires are also spreading across the neighborin­g state of Oklahoma, where emergency response teams have already been activated to battle the blazes. (Anadolu)

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