Bushfires rage across three Australian states
AUSTRALIA: Bushfires burned across three Australian states on
Tuesday, destroying houses and blackening an area larger than
Luxembourg, with one major fire front stretching 250 km (155 miles).
A firestorm on the southern island state of Tasmania struck the east
coast town of Scamander, destroying up to 23 houses, although
hard-pressed firefighters had little time to assess the damage as
gusting winds opened fresh fronts. "You could hear houses exploding and
trees going down, you could see the flames roaring up over the hill,"
resident Sue Brown told local media.
In Victoria, bushfires sparked by lightning strikes continued to burn
in rugged bushland in the northeast of the state, destroying more than
280,000 hectares (692,000 acres).
Two of the largest fires had linked to form a 250-km front, although
cooler weather was assisting a 2,000-strong force of firefighters,
troops and 45 water-bombing aircraft before the forecast return of
soaring temperatures later in the week.
"Towards the end of the week we will be back in to having higher fire
danger indexes and potentially extreme fire conditions," Department of
Sustainability and Environment (DSE) spokesman Craig Ferguson told local
radio.
In New South Wales state, a blaze lit by firefighters to rob
bushfires of fuel leapt containment lines to destroy an ancient
protected Blue Gum forest in the Blue Mountains, west of Sydney. And
southwest of the Australian capital, Canberra, firefighters were
struggling to contain a wildfire fanned by strong winds near the
mountain town of Tumut.
Canberra, Tuesday, Reuters |