Oman Daily Observer

Australian PM returns, apologises for holiday amid fire crisis

-

SYDNEY: Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison apologised on Sunday for his decision to take an unannounce­d family holiday to Hawaii in the midst of a bushfire emergency and record-breaking heat.

Morrison came back on Saturday night, having decided to cut his trip short after widespread public criticism and the deaths of two firefighte­rs who were killed battling a “horrendous” blaze south-west of Sydney.

“I have returned from leave and I know that (my holiday) has caused some great anxiety in Australia,” Morrison said in a press conference Sunday morning, adding that with “the benefit of hindsight” he would have acted differentl­y.

“I am sure Australian­s are fairminded and understand that when you make a promise to your kids you try and keep it,” Morrison said. “But as prime minister, you have other responsibi­lities, and I accept that and

I accept the criticism.”

The prime minister’s office was also heavily criticised for declining to confirm Morrison’s whereabout­s during the bush fire crisis, which triggered a second state of emergency in New South Wales (NSW) on Thursday.

The hashtags #Wheresscot­ty and #Morrisonfi­res trended on Twitter in Australia this week, and a student protest was staged at Morrison’s Sydney residence.

“Thank you for doing nothing in Australia and holidaying in Hawaii,” one of the young protesters said in Facebook Live video posted by rally organisers Schools Strike 4 Climate.

Upon his return, Morrison said that he can “accept the criticism.”

“For those Australian­s I caused upset to, I apologise for that,” he said.

This week, Australia experience­d its hottest days on record with the Bureau of Meteorolog­y recording a national average temperatur­e of41.9 degrees Celsius on Wednesday and 41.0 degrees on Thursday.

At Sunday’s press conference the conservati­ve prime minister also addressed climate change, as the government faces pressure to take more action.

“There is no argument about the links between... broader issues of global climate change and weather events around the world,” Morrison said.

“But I’m sure people equally would acknowledg­e that the direct connection to any single fire event it’s not a credible suggestion to make that link.”

Both South Australia and New South Wales revealed devastatin­g figures due to bush fires over the past three days.

South Australia’s Premier Steven Steven Marshall told reporters on Sunday evening that at least 72 homes had been destroyed in the Cudlee Creek fire which started on Friday. Some 400 sheds and outbuildin­gs and 227 vehicles were also destroyed in the fire.

25,000 hectares have already burned, while 300 firefighte­rs are battling the areas still burning.

Two people died in South Australia, which saw 49 degrees Celsius heat this week, while the smoke from the blaze dropped the city’s air quality to poor on Sunday.

In New South Wales, Premier Gladys Berejiklia­n said there was “not much left” of the village of Balmoral, south-west of Sydney, due to an outof-control, fast-moving Green Wattle Creek fire, which hit the town twice between Thursday and Saturday.

“We have still got an enormous amount of fire burning in the landscape,” Shane Fitzsimmon­s, the head of state’s Rural Fire Service (RFS), told reporters in Sydney on Sunday.

“Fire behaviour continues to be very challengin­g for firefighte­rs and those areas affected by fire.”

In Victoria, milder weather conditions helped firefighte­rs to battle several fires on Sunday, but the blaze burning since November flared up on Saturday during an extreme heatwave after dry lightning strikes started the fire in several areas.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Australia’s Prime Minister Scott Morrison is briefed by NSW RFS Commission­er Shane Fitzsimmon­s in the NSW Rural Fire Service control room in Sydney.
— Reuters Australia’s Prime Minister Scott Morrison is briefed by NSW RFS Commission­er Shane Fitzsimmon­s in the NSW Rural Fire Service control room in Sydney.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman