Bangkok Post

Fire bears down on Canberra

Australia declares state of emergency

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CANBERRA: Authoritie­s in Canberra yesterday declared the first state of emergency as a bushfire bore down on the Australian capital.

Chief Minister of the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) Andrew Barr said the measure “will be in place for as long as Canberra is at risk”.

The measures come ahead of heatwave conditions expected over coming days and as forecasts predicted fires could hit southern suburbs of the city of about 400,000.

“It may become uncontroll­able,” Mr Barr warned. “A state of emergency is the strongest signal we can send to the ACT community that they must prepare themselves and their families.”

Authoritie­s also warned of so-called ember attacks, where winds blow glowing ash ahead of the fire front.

It is the first time that a state of emergency has been declared in the Australian Capital Territory since 2003 when fires destroyed almost 500 homes.

The main threat comes from the Orroral Valley fire, which has burned around 18,000 hectares of mostly remote bushland.

Temperatur­es reached above 40C on Thursday in South Australia state, where dangerous fire weather warnings were issued in several bushfirepr­one areas.

The heatwave was expected to hit Melbourne and Canberra lat yesterday before parts of Sydney reach 45C at the weekend.

Authoritie­s say the searing heat, accompanie­d by dry winds, would bring severe bushfire conditions to parts of New South Wales and Victoria — where more than 80 fires are still burning across the two states.

Storms are forecast to follow the heatwave, bringing rain that could help dampen fires but also the potential for wild weather, including flash flooding.

Extreme weather has battered parts of Australia in recent weeks, bringing giant hail, floods and landslides.

At least 33 people have died and vast swathes of the country have been burned since September.

The months-long crisis has sparked renewed calls for Australia’s conservati­ve government to take immediate action on climate change, with street protests urging Morrison to reduce the country’s reliance on coal.

Scientists say the bushfire disaster was exacerbate­d by climate change, coming on the back of a crippling drought that turned forests into a tinderbox and allowed blazes to spread out of control quickly.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A man cleans the forecourt of Parliament House surrounded by smoke in Canberra, Australia.
REUTERS A man cleans the forecourt of Parliament House surrounded by smoke in Canberra, Australia.

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