Australia’s bushfires: Evacuees prepare for another night on beaches

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BATEMANS BAY, Australia. – The immediate threat from Australia’s devastating bushfires may have eased — at least temporarily — but thousands of people are still living in campsites along the country’s east coast, unable to return home.

At the makeshift evacuation center at the Batemans Bay beachfront on Sunday, children in pajamas played with pets and families made up beds in cars and trailers as they prepared to spend another night outdoors.

Many people who were urged or ordered by authorities to flee nearby towns and homesteads several days ago still did not know whether their homes and properties had survived the fierce wildfires that have ripped through large parts of the east coast.

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Gordon Bell has been at the Batemans Bay campsite, around 220 km south of Sydney, with his wife and four children for three days.

“We don’t know if the fire’s even got to where we were, so we’ve to find all that out,” Bell, who runs a fence building business, told Reuters. “Can’t work at the moment. Neither can my wife. So it’s pretty bad.”

Australia has been battling wildfires across large swathes of its east coast for weeks, with the blazes scorching more than 5.25 million hectares (13 million acres) of land and destroying almost 1,500 houses in one state alone.

Thousands of people have been evacuated from coastal towns at the peak of the summer holiday season, in one of the biggest coordinated operations since the evacuation of Darwin after Cyclone Tracy flattened the northern city in 1974.

Some people who live in high-risk fire areas have been in and out of evacuation centers over the past couple of weeks as the volatile and unpredictable fires changed direction and intensity.

“The amount of times I’ve packed all my belongings in the car, or tried to get it out, you know what I mean? Dragged the kids somewhere that we are going to be out of our house for who knows how long,” Stacey Ballentine said as some of her six children played with toys on the sandy grass. “And not knowing what’s going on and how bad it’s going to be.

It’s a bit stressful.”

A large-scale military and police effort was continuing on Sunday to provide supplies and evacuate those still isolated by the fires. Many areas were without power and mobile communications, and volunteer services like the Red Cross were serving food to encamped people.

“Information is scarce,” Batemans Bay resident Frank Scognamiglio said as he read on the beach with his son Rocco. “We are just trying to keep safe and looking after each other.”

DAMAGE ASSESSMENT BEGINS

Australian authorities began assessing the damage on Sunday from heat wave-spurred bushfires that swept through two states a day earlier, as cooler conditions provided a temporary respite from blazes that have scarred the country’s east coast for weeks.

Light rain and cooler temperatures in the southeast of the country were a welcome change from the searing heat that has fuelled the devastating fires, but officials warned they were not enough to put out almost 200 fires still burning.

“It certainly is a welcome reprieve, it is psychological relief if nothing else,” Commissioner Shane Fitzsimmons of the New South Wales (NSW) state Rural Fire Service said in an afternoon briefing on the situation. “But unfortunately it is not putting out the fires.”

Tens of thousands of homes in both NSW and Victoria states were without power on Sunday as a large-scale military and police effort continued to provide supplies and evacuate thousands of people who have been trapped for days in coastal towns by the fires.

Initial estimates put damaged or destroyed properties in the hundreds, but authorities said the mass evacuations by residents of at-risk areas appear to have prevented major loss of life. Twenty-four people have been killed since the start of this year’s wildfire season.

Fire officials said temperatures were expected to rise again during the week and the next major flashpoint would come by Thursday, but it was too early to gauge the likely severity of the threat.

“The weather activity we’re seeing, the extent and spread of the fires, the speed at which they’re going, the way in which they are attacking communities who have never ever seen fire before is unprecedented,” NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian said.

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Thousands of people have been evacuated from coastal towns at the peak of the summer holiday season, in one of the biggest coordinated operations since the evacuation of Darwin after cyclone Tracy flattened the northern city in 1974.

Australia has been battling blazes across much of its east coast for months, with experts saying climate change has been a major factor in a three-year drought that has left much of the country’s bushland tinder-dry and susceptible to fires.

HIGHLIGHTS

Following are highlights of what is happening across Australia:

* Prime Minister Scott Morrison said Singapore and Papua New Guinea have made offers of military support. New Zealand was sending an additional three Air Force helicopters and crews, two Army Combat Engineer Sections and a command element to support Australian Defense efforts.

* As smoke cleared, about 350 people were due to be airlifted out of the Victorian town of Mallacoota on Sunday, where around 1,000 people were evacuated by sea on Friday. That would leave about 400 people who had chosen to stay in the community, The Age newspaper reported.

* No fires were burning out of control in the New South Wales, but four fires in Victoria had Evacuate Now or Emergency Level warnings.

* A threat earlier on Sunday to the NSW town of Eden had eased by late afternoon, and authorities said evacuation was no longer necessary.

* Haze from the fires was turning skies orange as far away as New Zealand. Police there asked people to not call the emergency phone number.

* In Canberra, officials asked for 100,000 extra breathing masks from the national stockpile as the country’s capital recorded the worst air quality in the world on Sunday, according to the IQAir AirVisual global index. The masks are expected to arrive on Monday.

* Actors, pop stars and Britain’s royal family stepped in to offer support for victims of the fires, helping to raise millions for firefighting services and wildlife shelters.

* The death of a 47-year-old man who was defending a friend’s rural property in NSW took the national toll this season to 24. NSW Premier Berejiklian said there was no one unaccounted for in NSW. Victorian authorities said four people were unaccounted for in Victoria.

* The federal government on Saturday announced an unprecedented call up of army reservists to support firefighters as well other resources including a third navy ship equipped for disaster and humanitarian relief. It also announced the creation of a federal bushfires response agency.

* RFS Commissioner Fitzsimmons criticized the government for not informing him of its policy proposal, saying he found out about it from the media and it created confusion on one of the busiest days ever for fighting fires.

* PM Morrison also faced criticism for a video he posted on social media outlining how the government is tackling the fires. Morrison has been under sustained attack for handling of the crisis after he jetted out for a family holiday in Hawaii. He apologized and returned early but was heckled and snubbed when he toured fire-hit regions in recent days.

* More than 5.25 million hectares (13 million acres) of land has been burnt this fire season. Almost 1,500 homes have been destroyed in NSW state alone. — Reuters

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