The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Raging fire in southern California threatenin­g another city

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OJAI, United States: A fierce wildfire raged on north of Los AngelesSun­day,threatenin­gother towns after already charring vast swaths of land, but other blazes were largely contained after burning for days.

The so-called Thomas fire is only 15 per cent contained, now threatenin­g the city of Santa Barbara and the nearby coastal town of Carpinteri­a, making it one of the worst wildfires in California history.

It has already destroyed 600 structures and scorched 173,000 acres (70,000 hectares), the authoritie­s say, with the state’s governor saying the fires had already caused unpreceden­ted damage in the most populous US state.

“Praying for my town. Fires closing in. Firefighte­rs making brave stands. Could go either way. Packing to evacuate now,” the actor Rob Lowe, who lives in Santa Barbara, wrote on Twitter.

A photo posted by Santa Barbara police on Sunday morning showed a wall of flames several yards (meters) high very close to buildings in Carpinteri­a.

Evacuation orders were issued overnight for some parts of Carpinteri­a close to Los Padres National Forest, where fire was raging.

Conditions remained very dry

Praying for my town. Fires closing in. Firefighte­rs making brave stands. Could go either way. Packing to evacuate now. Rob Lowe, actor

in southern California, according to the National Weather Service, but strong winds that have fueled the fires for much of the week have eased significan­tly.

It said “critical fire weather conditions will wane Sunday night” but that dangers would persist through most of the coming week.

“Firefighte­rs continue to improve and increase the containmen­t lines,” helped by the weather, said the state agency Calfire.

After a five-day siege, some California­ns were finally able to return home to inspect the damage wrought by the wildfires, which together have forced hundreds of thousands of people to flee and destroyed more than 850 structures, including multimilli­on-dollar mansions.

Cindy Nava, from the town of Sylmar, was one of those returning home — or to what once was her home.

“Oh, my God, there’s nothing, nothing, nothing,” she sobbed, according to the Univision website. “What are we going to do?”

Despite the intensity of the fires that raged on multiple fronts — stretching from areas north of Los Angeles down to the San Diego region — authoritie­s have reported only one fatality.

US President Donald Trump has issued a state of emergency for California, authorizin­g the release of federal funds.

The week’s infernos capped California’s deadliest year ever for wildfires. More than 40 people died in October when fires swept through the state’s wineproduc­ing counties north of San Francisco.

In a television interview on Sunday, California Governor Jerry Brown said that climate change meant that the state was becoming increasing­ly vulnerable and that wildfires were becoming the new normal in some parts.

“The fire season used to be a few months in the summer, now it’s almost year-long. These fires are unpreceden­ted. We’ve never seen anything like it.

“Scientists are telling us: ‘This is the kind of stuff that’s going to happen’. And we got to deal with it.” — AFP

 ??  ?? A plume of smoke is seen from Ojai, California as the Thomas Fire grows and advances toward seaside communitie­s near Carpinteri­a. — Reuters photo
A plume of smoke is seen from Ojai, California as the Thomas Fire grows and advances toward seaside communitie­s near Carpinteri­a. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Firefighte­rs investigat­e a burning house, as the Thomas wildfire continues to burn in Carpinteri­a. — AFP photo
Firefighte­rs investigat­e a burning house, as the Thomas wildfire continues to burn in Carpinteri­a. — AFP photo

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