96 dead – Australian Wildfires worst in history

In Australasia, Drought & Fires, News Headlines

BBC – The death toll from bush fires in southern Australia has reached 96, the worst in the country’s history.

Thousands of firefighters are battling several major fires, and the number of dead is expected to rise as rescue workers reach areas ravaged by fire.
Victoria Premier John Brumby said he had accepted an offer from the federal government to send in the army.

Entire towns have been destroyed in the fires, fanned by extremely high temperatures and unpredictable winds.
Temperatures are dropping now, but officials fear they will not be able to get the fires under control until there is substantial rain.

‘Absolutely horrific’

Firefighters have been battling against what are described as the worst conditions in the state’s history.
Kevin Rudd: “It’s an appalling tragedy for the nation”
Witnesses described seeing walls of flames four storeys high, trees exploding and the skies raining ash, as fires tore across 30,000 hectares (115 sq miles) of forests, farmland and towns.
The BBC’s Nick Bryant in Sydney said police suspect that in at least one case fires have been restarted by arsonists after being extinguished by firefighters.

New South Wales Premier Nathan Rees said arsonists faced a maximum 25 years’ jail.
“We will throw the book at you if you are caught,” he was quoted as saying by the AFP news agency.

AUSTRALIAN BUSH FIRES

16 February 1983: 75 dead, 2,300 homes destroyed in “Ash Wednesday” bushfires in Victoria and South Australia
8 January 1969: At least 22 dead, 230 homes lost in rural Victoria
7 February 1967: 62 dead, 1,300 homes destroyed in fires in Hobart, Tasmania
13 January 1939: 71 dead, 700 homes destroyed in “Black Friday” fires in Victoria
February – March 1922: 60 die in Gippsland, eastern Victoria

At least 640 homes have been destroyed in Victoria and about 14,000
homes are without power.
Most of the people who died came from a cluster of small towns to the north of Melbourne. The BBC’s Phil Mercer in Sydney said many charred bodies had been found in cars. It is thought they were trying to escape the fires but were overtaken by their “sheer speed and ferocity”.
At least 12 people died in the town of Kinglake, four at Wandong, four at St Andrews and three at Strathewen.
One Strathewen resident told ABC local radio how people had witnessed “absolutely horrific” scenes as they had helped battle the flames.
“The school’s gone, the hall’s gone… some people left it too late. We’ve lost friends, and we’re just waiting for more – children, loved ones,” she said.
The town of Marysville, with about 500 residents, was said to have been burned to the ground.
Australia is a tough country to live in. We have had no rain for eight weeks and that is why so much is burning.

Local fire officer Greg Esnouf said: “We’re starting to get some reports in now that are very saddening. This latest report says Marysville possibly one building left standing – that’s just shocking.”
One person was reported dead in Marysville, but most residents managed to shelter from the blaze in a local park.
A survivor from Kinglake, Darren Webb-Johnson, told Sky TV: “The service station went, the take-away store across the road went, cylinders (exploded) left, right and centre, and 80% of the town burnt down to the ground.”

‘Tragic day’

Tens of thousands of firefighters have been trying to contain blazes in two other states – New South Wales and South Australia – but the fires there were largely contained or burning away from residential areas.
The fire service is using water-bombing aircraft to contain fires and thousands of volunteers are using water hoses.
“It’s obviously a tragic day and a tragic week in our history,” Mr Brumby said.
Late on Sunday, he said he had accepted an offer from Prime Minister Kevin Rudd to send in troops to relieve overstretched emergency crews.
“Hell in all its fury has visited the good people of Victoria in the last 24 hours,” said Mr Rudd.
Bush fires are common in Australia, but the current blazes have eclipsed the death toll from what had been the previous worst fire in 1983, when 75 people died on a day that became known as Ash Wednesday.

The leader of the Green party, Bob Brown said summer fires would get worse unless Australia and other nations showed more leadership on reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
“It’s a sobering reminder of the need for this nation and the whole world to act and put at a priority our need to tackle climate change,” he said.

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