Fire leaves hundreds homeless in Isiolo County
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Monday, January 20, 2014
Tuesday, January 14, 2014
Australia braces for worst fire danger
SYDNEY, Tuesday
Australian
authorities have warned of some of the worst fire danger since a 2009
inferno which killed 173 people, with most of the continent's southeast
sweltering through a major heat wave.
Victoria state,
where the so-called Black Saturday firestorm flattened entire villages
in 2009 and destroyed more than 2,000 homes, was again bracing for
extreme fire weather.
"These next four days promise to
be amongst the most significant that we have faced in Victoria since
Black Saturday," said acting state premier Peter Ryan.
Tens
of thousands of firefighters were on standby, and 1,290 brigades were
in a "state of high preparedness", he added, with the peak danger day
expected on Friday when very strong winds are forecast.
Two separate grass-fires tested crews early at Little River, west of Melbourne, and Kangaroo Ground to the east.
The
flames raced out of control and triggering brief emergency alerts
before water-bombing aircraft and engine teams managed to bring them
under control.
BOY COLLAPSED
There were also blazes alight in neighbouring South Australia state.
Victoria
and South Australia are bracing this week for what forecasters are
describing as "severe to extreme heatwave conditions", with successive
days of temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius (104 F) expected.
A
similar heat wave struck before the 2009 fires, Australia's worst
natural disaster of the modern era in terms of casualties. An estimated
374 people died during the preceding heat wave, with another 173
fatalities in the firestorm itself.
If the forecasts come to pass, Melbourne will endure its longest stretch of hot weather in 100 years.
Road
tar was melting in southern Tasmania, with temperatures in the island
state some 18 degrees above the January average, breaking several
records.
On Tuesday, players at the Australian Open
were sweltering. A ball boy collapsed and water bottles melted on court
as the mercury soared above 40 degrees Celsius. Experts said the outlook
had echoes of 2009.
"The forecast weather patterns are
quite reminiscent of conditions before Black Saturday, with severe and
expansive high temperatures across the southern part of the continent
and the presence of low pressure cells on either side of the country in
the tropics," said bushfire specialist Jason Sharples from the
University of New South Wales in Canberra.
EL NINO PATTERN
"The
combination of high temperature and low relative humidity means that
the moisture content of vegetation will be very low. Hence, if a
bushfire was to start, it would be expected to spread more rapidly than
normal."
Hospitals and emergency authorities are on
standby for an influx of heat-related call-outs, with Ambulance Victoria
recalling "all available staff (and) every available vehicle."
The
heat system has moved across Australia from the west coast, where a
wildfire in Perth razed 52 homes on Sunday and claimed the life of one
man as he prepared his home for the flames.
Hundreds of
residents sheltering in evacuation centres since the weekend were
allowed to return to their homes for the first time Tuesday and reported
devastating scenes.
"The glass didn't shatter, it melted," said Stoneville resident Stacey Delich.
"It's
bad luck and that's all it is," she added. "We live in the bush and we
know it can happen, and unfortunately it happened to us."
Wildfires
and hot weather are common in Australia's December-February summer
months, but the current event is unusual because it is occurring in what
is supposed to be a neutral period in the El Nino pattern bringing
average conditions.
El Nino, a phenomenon characterised
by usually warm ocean temperatures in the central and eastern
equatorial Pacific, is generally associated with hotter, drier
conditions in Australia.
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