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- REUTERS

FAST- MOVING wildfires burning across northern California’s wine country have claimed 17 lives, left at least 180 people injured and destroyed more than 2000 homes and businesses.

Flames have spread across more than 46,500 hectares since the fires broke out on Sunday but firefighte­rs are taking advantage of cooler temperatur­es, decreased winds and coastal fog to try to make headway against the fires.

North of San Francisco, the blazes reduced houses to ashes in several communitie­s.

The city of Santa Rosa was particular­ly hard hit by the socalled Tubbs Fire, which damaged a Hilton hotel and destroyed a mobile home park.

The flames were fanned by high temperatur­es and dry conditions, displacing tens of thousands of residents and forcing schools and at least two hospitals in Sonoma County to close.

Steve Crawford, a CalFire operations chief, said at a briefing for law enforcemen­t and utility officials yesterday that a change in the weather could help firefighte­rs.

“We need to jump on it and take advantage of this lull before any other wind jumps up,” Crawford said. “There’s a lot of devastatio­n out there, people running around who just lost everything.”

In the celebrated wine country north of San Francisco, Sonoma County bore the brunt of the fatalities, with 13 of the deaths in California wine country.

Fires killed a total of 17 people statewide.

More than 91,000 homes and businesses served by Pacific Gas & Electric were without power, with most of those customers in Northern California’s Sonoma and Napa counties, and gas was shut off to 28,000 customers, representa­tives for the utility company said.

California Governor Jerry Brown has declared a state of emergency in seven counties.

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