The Borneo Post

Nearly 2,000 firefighte­rs tackling the blaze had contained 56 per cent of the Springs Fire by day’s end

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LOS ANGELES: Firefighte­rs made ‘excellent’ progress Saturday in battling a massive California wildfire that threatened 4,000 homes near Los Angeles, nearly doubling the area under control, they said.

Helped by cooler temperatur­es and higher humidity, the nearly 2,000 firefighte­rs tackling the blaze had contained 56 per cent of the Springs Fire by day’s end, compared to 30 per cent in the morning.

The inferno, the biggest of a series of wildfires fuelled by tinder- dry brush and soaring temperatur­es this week in California — months before the usual wildfire season — could be fully under control by Monday.

“With the milder weather conditions, firefighte­rs are making excellent progress on extending fire containmen­t lines,” said an afternoon update from the Ventura County Fire Department ( VCFD).

The three- day blaze forced hundreds of residents to evacuate and damaged 15 homes in the rugged hills north of Malibu some 65 kilometres west of Los Angeles.

It was fueled by strong Santa Ana winds and temperatur­es in the 90s.

By Saturday the total area burnt remained at 28,000 acres — the same as Friday — “and that figure is not expected to change significan­tly,” it said in an online statement.

Authoritie­s re- opened scenic Pacific Coast Highway ( PCH) — a section of which was closed on Thursday and Friday — although some local roads remained closed.

The National Weather Service lifted its red- flag warning for wildfire risk, while temperatur­es dropped to the mid- 60s (17-19 degrees Celsius).

Air humidity, which had dropped to below five percent on Thursday when the blaze erupted, was up to 75 per cent by late Saturday, and some rain was forecast for yesterday.

No fire-related casualties were reported over the three days, although a firefighte­r and a civilian were injured in a traffic accident away from the fire, said the VCFD.

At its

height some

1,900 firefighte­rs — including from Los Angeles and other neighborin­g areas — were battling the windfanned flames, helped by 247 fire engines, six air tankers and 11 helicopter­s.

The fire forced the closure of a university campus and ravaged a beach shooting range at the Point

With the milder weather conditions, firefighte­rs are making excellent progress on extending fire containmen­t lines. Ventura County Fire Department (VCFD)

Magu naval base. In addition to the damaged homes, it destroyed some 25 outbuildin­gs and damaged another 15.

Some celebritie­s, including actors Jamie Foxx and Tom Selleck, live near the evacuation area. Many of the homes were luxury ranches that had stables of horses and other animals.

California State University at Channel Islands cancelled classes and activities at its Camarillo site since Thursday, but planned to reopen yesterday, according to its website.

Wildfires are common across the western United States in the summer, and in Southern California, they are often fanned by strong offshore Santa Ana winds later in the year, in the fall or winter.

Another blaze erupted Friday in Glendale, a residentia­l suburb just 10 miles north of Los Angeles, burning about 75 acres of brush and forcing some local evacuation­s and the closure a nearby freeway. — AFP

 ??  ?? HARD WORKING: A firefighte­r sprays water on a flare up as a wildfire burns along the Pacific Coast Highway close to Naval Base Ventura County (NBVC) near Point Mugu, California. — AFP photo
HARD WORKING: A firefighte­r sprays water on a flare up as a wildfire burns along the Pacific Coast Highway close to Naval Base Ventura County (NBVC) near Point Mugu, California. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? STILL ALIVE: A mule deer walks through the charred remains of an oak forest at the Springs fire near Camarillo, California. — AFP photo
STILL ALIVE: A mule deer walks through the charred remains of an oak forest at the Springs fire near Camarillo, California. — AFP photo

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