Cooler weather brings respite in Australian wildfire crisis

0

SYDNEY (AP) — Milder temperatures Sunday brought hope of a respite from wildfires that have ravaged three
Australian states, claiming 24 lives and destroying almost 2,000 homes.
Saturday was a day of high tension as soaring temperatures and strong winds fanned fires in New South
Wales, Victoria and South Australia, forcing thousands to flee and bringing flames to the suburban
fringes of Sydney.
Thousands of firefighters fought to contain the blazes but many continued to burn out of control,
threatening to wipe out rural townships and causing almost incalculable damage to property and wildlife.

As dawn broke over a blackened landscape Sunday, a picture emerged of disaster of unprecedented scale.
The Rural Fire Service said 150 fires were active in the state, 64 of them uncontrolled.
"It’s not something we have experienced before," New South Wales Premier Gladys Berejiklian
said.
"The weather activity we’re seeing, the extent and spread of the fires, the speed at which they’re
(moving), the way they are attacking communities that have never seen fire is unprecedented," she
said.
She said that the extent of the bushfire season was the largest in living memory, "and many experts
have been around much longer than I have, who fought fires and observed circumstances. All agree we’re
in uncharted territory."
The latest fatality occurred at Batlow in New South Wales, where a 47-year-old man died Saturday night
while defending the home of a friend from encroaching fires. New South Wales police said the man was
found unconscious in a vehicle and could not be revived.
Earlier Saturday, a father and son who were battling flames for two days died on a highway on Kangaroo
Island, off South Australia state. Authorities identified them as Dick Lang, a 78-year-old acclaimed
bush pilot and outback safari operator, and his 43-year-old son, Clayton. Their family said their losses
left them "heartbroken and reeling from this double tragedy."
Lang, known as "Desert Dick," led tours for travelers throughout Australia and other countries.

"The weather conditions have improved in New South Wales and Victoria but there are still many fires
raging and there’s a significant firefighting effort continuing," Prime Minister Scott Morrison
told a news conference Sunday.
He announced the establishment of a national bushfire recovery agency, headed by former Australian
Federal Police Commissioner Andrew Colvin, which would provide support payments to small businesses and
help repair damaged infrastructure.
The deadly wildfires, which have been raging since September, have already burned about 5 million
hectares (12.35 million acres) of land. That’s more than any one year in the U.S. since Harry Truman was
president.
The early and devastating start to Australia’s summer wildfires has also been catastrophic for the
country’s wildlife, likely killing nearly 500 million birds, reptiles and mammals in New South Wales
alone, Sydney University ecologist Chris Dickman told the Sydney Morning Herald. Frogs, bats and insects
are excluded from his estimate, making the toll on animals much greater.
Experts say climate change has exacerbated the unprecedented wildfires around the world. Morrison has
been criticized for his repeated refusal to say climate change is impacting the fires, instead deeming
them a natural disaster.
For the first time in Australia’s history, 3,000 army, navy and air force reservists have been called up
and will be thrown into the battle against the fires.
Morrison announced the decision Saturday and committed almost $14 million to lease four fire-fighting
aircraft for the duration of the wildfire crisis.
But even those announcements failed to quiet criticism of Morrison’s leadership and slow response to the
fires. Instead, they provoked new anger among some at the forefront of the firefight who said they were
blindsided by the prime minister’s decision.
Rural Fire Service Commissioner Shane Fitzsimmons, who is leading the fight in New South Wales, said he
learned of the deployment of reservists through media reports.
"It is fair to say it was disappointing and some surprise to hear about these things through public
announcements in the middle of what was one of our worst days this season with the second-highest number
of concurrent emergency warning fires ever in the history of New South Wales," he said.
Morrison was also forced to defend a video posted on social media Saturday, which promoted the deployment
of reservists and the government’s response to the wildfires.
The non-partisan Australia Defence Association said the video breached rules around political
advertising.
"Party-political advertising milking ADF (Australian Defence Force) support to civil agencies
fighting bushfires is a clear breach of the non-partisanship convention applying to both the ADF and
ministers/MPs," the association said.
In a tweet, Morrison said "the video message simply communicates the Government’s policy decisions
and the actions the Government is undertaking to the public."
___
Associated Press writer Steve McMorran in Wellington, New Zealand, contributed to this report.

No posts to display