Dozens arrested for deliberately starting bushfires that left 26 dead and razed 2,000 homes
DOZENS have been arrested in Australia for arson as ferocious bushfires leave 26 dead and destroyed thousands of homes.
Australia is fighting an unprecedented bushfire season, which have been caused by record temperatures and widespread drought.
Many have blamed the fires on climate change but new figures have revealed cops in the country have arrested multiple people suspected of starting fires in the wild.
In New South Wales, 24 were charged with deliberately setting bushfires since November 8 while South Australia has seen 10 arrest reports since September 1.
Almost 2,000 houses have already been destroyed in the bushfire crisis, officials say.
Temperatures soared last week, leaving Sydney the hottest place in the world at 50C.
Twenty six people and millions of animals have already died since September.
The new arrest figures have sparked a row over the cause of the deadly bushfire crisis, with some saying climate change has been overstated.
Liberal MP Craig Kelly claimed that "arson is not caused by climate change".
Good Morning Britain weather presenter Laura Tobin has hit back at Kelly after he branded her an "ignorant Pommy weather girl" over her reporting of the country's bushfires.
A spokesman for News South Wales Police said: "Investigations into the cause, origin and overall impact of fires are continuing and since the latest State of Emergency was declared, Strike Force Tronto has provided expertise to six police area commands and eight police districts.
ARSON ARRESTS
"As inquiries continue, police are appealing to the community to provide footage and/or images from phones, dashcam, or other devices, that show any of the fires in their infancy, even if only from a distance."
We told today how the young daughter of a firefighter killed battling the Australia fires wore her father's helmet on her head as she refused to leave his coffin’s side.
The heart breaking scenes came just moments after one-year-old Charlotte O’Dwyer accepted the service medal which was posthumously awarded to her father, Andrew O’Dwyer, following his death just before Christmas.
Wearing a white dress with her hair in pigtails, Charlotte at one stage touched her father’s casket before wandering up to the pulpit.
The young girl, described as her father’s greatest achievement, brought a much needed smile to the face of mourners as she lay under Mr O’Dwyer’s casket and ate from a bag of chips.
Mr O’Dwyer, 36, died in December when his fire truck rolled while battling the large Green Wattle Creek blaze in the NSW town of Buxton.
The brigade's deputy captain Geoffrey Keaton, who like Mr O'Dwyer was a father-of-one, also died in the tragic crash and was remembered at a separate service last week.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison, NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian, state Emergency Services Minister David Elliott and federal Labor MP Chris Bowen were among the hundreds of mourners, who filled the church as tributes flowed for the young father.
Firefighters formed a guard of honour as Mr O’Dwyer’s casket was carried into the church with some saluting and others putting their hand on their heart.