The Guardian (USA)

One dead and thousands forced to flee as wildfires sweep across US

- Staff and agencies

Wind-driven wildfires sweeping through parts of Nebraska contribute­d to the death of one person and injured at least three firefighte­rs, authoritie­s said Sunday.

The person who died was in Red Willow County, in the southwest corner of the state, Nebraska Emergency Management Agency spokeswoma­n Jodie Fawl said. She said she did not have details about that person or where the firefighte­rs were injured, though she said their injuries were not believed to be life-threatenin­g.

The Nebraska national guard deployed three helicopter­s and several support trucks to help battle the blazes.

The death came as wind-driven wildfires destroyed hundreds of structures in northern New Mexico and forced thousands to flee mountain villages as blazes burned unusually early in the year in the parched US southwest.

Two wildfires merged north-west of Las Vegas, New Mexico, and raced through 15 miles (24km) of forest driven by winds over 75mph (121km/ h), destroying more than 200 buildings, state authoritie­s said.

To the north-east, a fire about 35 miles east of Taos doubled in size to become the largest burning in the United States, forcing the evacuation of a scout ranch and threatenin­g several villages.

The wildfires are the most severe of nearly two dozen in the US south-west and raised concerns the region was in for a brutal fire year as a decades-long drought combined with abundant dry vegetation.

By Saturday, five counties in New Mexico were under a state of emergency after the governor, Michelle Lujan Grisham, issued one for Mora county. She had declared states of emergency for Colfax, Lincoln, San Miguel and Valencia counties on Friday.

“We have a longer, more dangerous and more dramatic fire season ahead of us,” Lujan Grisham told reporters, adding that the state had 20 active fires following Friday’s “unpreceden­ted” wind storm.

Winds and temperatur­es in New Mexico diminished on Saturday but remained strong enough to still fan fires,

and dozens of evacuation orders remained in place.

Over 200 structures have burned, Lujan Grisham said, not providing specifics on locations or the numbers of homes included in that count.

She appealed to residents to refrain from using fireworks or burning trash and to evacuate when fire warnings are issued. “You need to leave. The risks are too great,” she said.

The Calf Canyon and Hermits Peak fires near Las Vegas combined to burn 42,341 acres (171 sq km), an area larger than Florida’s Disney World. Evacuation­s expanded to half a dozen more communitie­s, including the village of Mora, the governor said.

Climate change has lowered winter snowpacks and allowed larger and more extreme fires to start earlier in the year, according to scientists.

East of Taos, the Cooks Peak fire nearly doubled in size to 48,672 acres, forcing the evacuation of the Philmont Scout Ranch and threatenin­g the village of Cimarron.

New Mexico as of Saturday had the most major wildfires burning of any state, though neighbouri­ng Arizona also had large fires, where flames stretching 100ft (30 meters) raced through rural neighbourh­oods near Flagstaff this week.

Elsewhere in the region, the fire danger in the Denver area on Friday was the highest it had been in over a decade, according to the National Weather Service, because of unseasonab­le temperatur­es in the 80s (26C-32C) combined with strong winds and very dry conditions.

Reuters and Associated Press contribute­d to this report

• This article was amended on 24 April 2022. The Cooks Peak fire is to the east of Taos, not to the west, as an earlier version said.

 ?? Photograph: Eddie Moore/AP ?? The Calf Canyon fire burns in northern New Mexico, fuelled by high winds and temperatur­es across the US south-west.
Photograph: Eddie Moore/AP The Calf Canyon fire burns in northern New Mexico, fuelled by high winds and temperatur­es across the US south-west.

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