Australia bushfires: towns devastated and lives lost as blazes turn the sky red
Australia’s bushfire crisis has claimed at least two
more lives, authorities confirmed on Tuesday, as dozens of fires tore through
several towns on the east coast and forced thousands of people to take shelter
on beaches.
Two people – a father and son – died when fire hit
the New South Wales town of Cobargo on Tuesday, while emergency services
officials held grave fears for a third person, near Narooma, on the state’s
south coast.
In Victoria, where more than 200,000ha has burned in
the state’s east, at least four people were unaccounted for. The armed forces
stand ready to evacuate those sheltering on the state’s beaches if needed.
Eleven people have been confirmed dead across all
states in this year’s bushfire season so far.
The NSW Rural Fire Service commissioner, Shane
Fitzsimmons, said it was “absolutely” the state’s worst bushfire season on
record as he warned the reality of the damage would become clear only once the
fires were under control.
“We need to brace ourselves for a considerable
number of properties, a considerable number of homes that are likely to have
been damaged and or destroyed right across these eight emergency warning fire
areas, given the extraordinary nature of the fire behaviour and fire spread
today,” he said.
In his New Year’s message, the prime minister, Scott
Morrison, said the fires were having a “devastating impact” and warned that the
weeks and months ahead would “continue to be difficult”.
“I wish we had better news on New Year’s Eve but,
one news we can always take comfort in is the amazing spirit of Australians,”
he said. “We have faced these disasters before and we have come through.”
The fire crisis swept up the coast during the day,
beginning with dramatic scenes in Mallacoota, in the far south-eastern corner
of Victoria, where about 4,000 people fled their homes and took refuge on the
beach and in boats as multiple fires surrounded the town, turning the sky black
by 9am, and then a hazy red.
As the day progressed, similar scenes unfolded all
the way up the NSW south coast, including large towns such as Batemans Bay and
popular holiday destinations such as Bermagui in the south, all the way up to
Jervis Bay, 250km further north.
Cobargo, a village a few kilometres inland from
Bermagui, lost much of its main street as the fires swept through. Further
north the town of Mogo suffered similar devastation, although dozens of animals
in its popular wildlife park were saved by staff.
Late on Tuesday evening, NSW police announced that
all telecommunications would be lost for a 150km stretch of the coast between
Nowra and Moruya.
More than 120 bushfires were still ablaze on Tuesday
evening, including eight at emergency level, and crews were concerned some
blazes in Victoria could jump the border into NSW fuelled by a southerly wind.
The defence minister, Linda Reynolds, announced that
the Australian Defence Force would deploy helicopters, fixed-wing aircraft and
naval vessels to assist in supplying and potentially evacuating people trapped
by the Victorian fires, after a request from the state premier, Daniel Andrews.
Victorian authorities are yet to quantify the damage
across East Gippsland, but said a “significant” number of homes had been lost
and at least one primary school destroyed, while many livestock are also
expected to have died.
Of the four people missing across East Gippsland,
Andrews said: “We do have very real fears for their safety. They have been in
active fire environments.”
On Tuesday afternoon, police in NSW confirmed that a
father and son had been killed in fires at Cobargo. The two men were protecting
their homes in the Bega Valley.
Another man was unaccounted for west of Narooma, on
the NSW south coast. “Unfortunately we think the news in that house will not be
good either,” the NSW police deputy commissioner, Gary Worboys, said.
Pictures posted to social media from countless small
communities up and down the coast and inland suggested a huge number of
properties had been destroyed, adding to the 900 confirmed lost in New South
Wales in this year’s fire season until last week.
On Tuesday evening, large fires were still burning
out of control including the 31,000ha Clyde Mountain fire near Batemans Bay,
the 26,000ha Green Valley fire east of Albury and the 64,000-ha Countegany fire
east of Cooma .
The opposition leader, Anthony Albanese, called for
a meeting of federal, state and territory governments, noting fires were
burning across multiple states. “I again say to the prime minister that it
isn’t acceptable, in my view, to say [the council of state and federal governments]
doesn’t need to meet until March,” he said.
Fire chiefs in NSW have said they expect the fires
to continue to burn until the state receives sustained rainfall. Tasmania,
Wester Australia and South Australia have also faced bushfires in recent days.
Albanese also described the City of Sydney’s
decision to go ahead with the New Year’s Eve fireworks as “problematic”.
Amid considerable debate in Sydney over the $6m
fireworks display, traditionally one of the largest in the world, authorities
said the show could go ahead despite potentially dangerous conditions.
“I understand the decision to proceed and on balance
I support that decision,” she said. “It’s not without acknowledging how there
are mixed feelings in the community about it.”
On Tuesday the NSW firefighter who died the previous
day was named as Samuel McPaul, 28. McPaul was killed while fighting fires 70km
east of Albury, near the Victorian border, when the 10-tonne truck he was in
was overturned by a freak “fire tornado”. McPaul’s wife Megan is expecting the
couple’s first child in May.