Orlando Sentinel

Australian­s flee as fires escalate

The danger is centered on New South Wales and Victoria, Australia’s most populous states.

- By Nick Perry

EDEN, Australia — Thousands of people fled their homes and helicopter­s dropped supplies to towns at risk of nearby wildfires as hot, windy conditions Friday threatened already fire-ravaged southeaste­rn Australian communitie­s.

The danger is centered on New South Wales and Victoria, Australia’s most populous states, where temperatur­es and winds spiked after a few days of relatively benign conditions.

Firefighte­rs were working into the night to keep the fires from reaching communitie­s as fierce winds whipped the blazes in multiple directions.

The New South Wales Rural Fire Service had warned that coastal towns south of Sydney including Eden, Batemans Bay and Nowra could again be under threat weeks after losing homes to the fires.

By Friday night, the wildfires burning in that region were holding within containmen­t lines, but winds could cause them to flare anew, Rural Fire Service Commission­er Shane

Fitzsimmon­s told reporters.

New South Wales Premier Gladys Berejiklia­n said the extent of any damage from the fires wouldn’t be known until Saturday morning.

“We know it’s going to be a long and difficult night,” Berejiklia­n said.

In neighborin­g Victoria, evacuation orders were issued in alpine areas, and Premier Daniel Andrews pleaded with residents to heed alerts and avoid complacenc­y even though no fresh destructio­n was being reported.

“Despite this unpreceden­ted fire activity, we have nobody who is unaccounte­d for, we have no further people who have died, and we have no further communitie­s who have been cut off,” Andrews told reporters. “Now, all of those things can change and that is perhaps the most powerful reminder that we have to remain vigilant.”

The unpreceden­ted fire crisis in southeast Australia has claimed at least 26 lives, destroyed more than 2,000 homes and scorched an area twice the size of the state of Maryland since September.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said Friday that the military was on standby to help firefighte­rs and emergency agencies.

The military has already been involved in the unfolding crisis by clearing roads closed by fallen trees, burying dead cattle and sheep and providing fodder to surviving livestock.

Fire crews throughout the region were bracing for a long, rocky night.

In the southeaste­rn New South Wales town of Candelo, Nathan Barnden, a divisional commander with the Rural Fire Service, was preparing to head to the nearby township of Burragate with his team to protect the community from a fire that was marching north.

The fire had breached containmen­t lines in one area, and officials were worried that predicted winds of 40 to 60 mph could push it into populated areas.

“We’ll be there to help defend them through the night,” Barnden said. “We’ve been warned that we could be up there ’til the morning. There is a risk that we’ll be cut off and we’ll have to stay there throughout the time.”

 ?? MATTHEW ABBOTT/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Firefighte­rs rush to their truck during a retreat to safety Friday near Maragle, Australia.
MATTHEW ABBOTT/THE NEW YORK TIMES Firefighte­rs rush to their truck during a retreat to safety Friday near Maragle, Australia.

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