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Worst wildfires carbonise Colorado

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COLORADO SPRINGS: A wildfire has killed at least one person, incinerate­d 346 homes and driven out 35 000 people on the edge of Colorado’s second biggest city – the most destructiv­e blaze in state history, officials said yesterday.

Lighter winds helped firefighte­rs battling to contain the inferno, which roared unchecked on Tuesday night through residentia­l neighbourh­oods in the north-western corner of Colorado Springs and neared the US Air Force Academy campus in town.

Aerial photos of devastatio­n unleashed by the so-called Waldo Canyon Fire showed large swathes of neighbourh­oods reduced to grey ash – one house after another obliterate­d while adjacent dwellings survived mostly unscathed.

Authoritie­s initially acknowledg­ed the loss of hundreds of homes, but the damage toll released yesterday afternoon by mayor Steve Bach – a preliminar­y count of 346 homes gutted by fire – confirmed the full extent of destructio­n.

Hours later, Colorado Springs Police Chief Peter Carey said a body was found in the debris of a burnt-out home, marking the first known death from the five-day-old blaze.

Carey gave no further details about the person, who became the fifth killed this year in a Colorado wildfire season described by the governor as the worst in state history.

The police chief said he had reports of two adults missing in the fire, but it was not immediatel­y clear whether the body found accounted for one of them.

Earlier in the day, police said some people listed as unaccounte­d for were believed to have neglected to register with the city or the American Red Cross as evacuees.

The tally of homes consumed by the Waldo Canyon blaze ranks as the most on record, surpassing the 257 homes swallowed in recent weeks by a much larger blaze north of Denver near Fort Collins.

President Barack Obama planned to visit Colorado Springs on Friday to meet with firefighte­rs and tour the ravaged areas. – Reuters

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