Bangkok Post

Firefighte­rs prepare for post-Xmas blaze crisis

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MELBOURNE: Scorching heat baking Australia eased yesterday bringing relief from extreme bushfires, which destroyed around 180 houses and killed one person over the weekend, allowing firefighte­rs to prepare for worsening conditions post-Christmas.

Six people have now died in bushfires which have destroyed more than 9.1 million acres across five states.

Potter Steve Harrison, 67, only survived a major blaze southwest of Sydney by crawling beneath a makeshift kiln as the flames passed over.

Mr Harrison stayed to defend his property in the town of Balmoral on Sunday but by the time he changed his mind it was too late to leave.

“I ran to my ute [truck] but my garden was already on fire, the driveway was on fire, the road was on fire so I couldn’t evacuate,” Mr Harrison said.

“The day before I had actually built myself a small kiln down the back — a coffin-sized kiln — just big enough for me to crawl inside,” he said.

“I could have [died] if I hadn’t thought about plan B. In that little kiln enclosure I made, I had a fire extinguish­er, a bucket of water, a drinking water bottle and a fire blanket.”

The town of Balmoral, population 400 and 150 houses, was virtually destroyed, the New South Wales (NSW) State Premier Gladys Berejiklia­n said.

Australia has been fighting wildfires for months as hot, dry conditions brought about an early start to the fire season.

Australia posted record temperatur­es over 41 degrees Celsius last week as an extreme heatwave swept across the country and a long-running drought in the country’s east has created tinderdry conditions.

Nearly 100 fires are burning across New South Wales state.

“Conditions have begun to ease,” the New South Wales Rural Fire Service said yesterday.

“Crews will continue their work today to identify and strengthen [fire] containmen­t lines, with favourable conditions over coming days.”

Temperatur­es are forecast to spike again in many states by the weekend, with the South Australian capital city of Adelaide forecast to reach 39 Celsius, according to the Bureau of Meteorolog­y. Similar temperatur­es are expected in the Victorian city of Melbourne in coming days.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Scott Morrison yesterday rejected calls for “reckless” and “job-destroying” cuts to the country’s vast coal industry in the face of a deadly climate-fuelled bushfire crisis.

“I am not going to write off the jobs of thousands of Australian­s by walking away from traditiona­l industries,” Mr Morrison told the Seven Network, in one of several morning interviews in which he rejected calls for further action on climate change.

“What we won’t do is engage in reckless and job-destroying and economycru­nching targets which are being sought,” he told Channel 9 yesterday morning.

 ?? AP ?? NSW Rural Fire Service crew fight the Gospers Mountain fire in Bilpin, New South Wales on Saturday.
AP NSW Rural Fire Service crew fight the Gospers Mountain fire in Bilpin, New South Wales on Saturday.

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