‘JUST THE BEGINNING’

Australia braced for fresh hell as 100F heatwave gives rise to new wave of wildfires

AUSTRALIA is braced for fresh hell as a 100f heatwave gives rise to new wave of wildfires.

The country has been ravaged by devastating blazes, with tens of thousands of square miles of bushland destroyed and at least 27 left dead.

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Flames tear through the bush as Australia braces for even worseCredit: PA:Press Association
Fire lights up the night in Mount Adrah, New South WalesCredit: Getty Images - Getty
The fires have ravaged tens of thousands of square miles across AustraliaCredit: Getty Images - Getty

And there could be worse to come with temperatures in Victoria expected to hit 40C (104F) and the state of disaster extended into the weekend.

There had been a brief respite for fire-ravaged communities with a brief window of cooler weather and rain this week.

But the mercury again skyrocketed today as dry windy conditions returned across south-eastern Australia.

Firefighters in New South Wales and Victoria worked into the night to keep the fires from reaching communities as fierce winds whipped up the inferno.

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In Victoria, evacuation orders were issued in alpine areas, and Premier Daniel Andrews pleaded with residents to heed alerts and avoid complacency even though no fresh destruction was being reported.

He said: "We're just at the beginning of what will be a really, really challenging summer."

PM Scott Morrison said Friday that the military was on standby to help firefighters and emergency agencies.

The military has already been involved in the unfolding crisis by clearing roads closed by fallen trees, burying dead cattle and sheep and providing fodder to surviving livestock.

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ROCKY NIGHT AHEAD

Fire crews throughout the region are bracing for a long, rocky night.

In neighbouring New South Wales, the coastal towns south of Sydney including Eden, Batemans Bay and Nowra could again be under threat weeks after losing homes to the fires, the fire service warned.

New South Wales Premier Gladys Berejiklian said the extent of any damage from the fires wouldn't be known until Saturday morning.

He said: "We know it's going to be a long and difficult night."

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In the southeastern New South Wales town of Candelo, Nathan Barnden, a divisional commander with the Rural Fire Service, was preparing to head to the nearby township of Burragate with his team to protect the community from a fire that was marching north.

Smoke billows into the sky in Eden, New South WalesCredit: Reuters
A plane drops fire retardant to protect a property in New South WalesCredit: AFP or licensors
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Smoke from the devastating fires is seen in satellite picturesCredit: EPA
Firefighters rest at Kingscote oval after fighting fires through the night on Kangaroo IslandCredit: EPA
Soldiers sit on a beach amongst burnt treesCredit: Reuters

The fire had breached containment lines in one area, and officials were worried that predicted winds of 40-60mph could push it into populated areas.

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Barnden said: “We’ll be there to help defend them through the night.

“We’ve been warned that we could be up there until the morning.

“There is a risk that we’ll be cut off and we’ll have to stay there throughout the time.”

The unprecedented fire crisis in southeast Australia has destroyed more than 2,000 homes and scorched an area twice the size of the US state of Maryland since September.

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Some 1.25billion wild animals have also died in the blazes, conservation group WWF-Australia estimates.

Shocking new figures released this week show how police have arrested 183 people on suspicion of deliberately starting bushfires across the country.

This includes a firefighter who has been charged with starting 17 fires while working with the Darwin River unit in the country’s Northern Territory.

Firefighters Battle to Protect Properties as Homes Destroyed by Bushfire Near Sydney
Some 1.25billion wild animals have also died in the blazesCredit: EPA
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The bushfires have been blamed on widespread drought and record temperatures as New South Wales experienced 50C heat last weekCredit: AFP or licensors
One firefighter in Darwin has been accused of deliberately igniting 17 wildfires - but lawyers argue he was actually fighting the blazes he was accused of startingCredit: AP:Associated Press

 

 

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