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Auzzies gets deadly burning X'mas again as usual

Fiery_Arson

Alfrescian
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http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20091223/wl_asia_afp/australiaweatherfirecyclone


People 'fleeing for their lives' in Australian fires
AFP

capt.photo_1261548054233-1-0.jpg

People 'fleeing for their lives' in Australian fires AFP/File – File photo shows a bushfire burning out of control in Victoria, Australia. Residents were "fleeing …
1 hr 27 mins ago

SYDNEY (AFP) – Residents were "fleeing for their lives" Wednesday as savage wildfires blazed out of control in South Australia, with several homes destroyed and more under threat, officials and witnesses said.

Less than a year after 173 people lost their lives in fires in neighbouring Victoria state, officials warned that searing heat and strong winds could prove catastrophic as a large blaze burned outside the town of Port Lincoln.

"We have unconfirmed reports of losses of five to six residences. There are other residential and commercial structures under threat," a Country Fire Service spokeswoman told state radio.

One resident, named Ray, told ABC radio he expected his house to be gone after watching "flames above the roof" as he fled.

He added: "I'd just like to say to people who are out there on the roads and blocking the roads, people like me are fleeing for our lives."

The Country Fire Service said the fire was just a few kilometres (miles) from Port Lincoln and extremely dangerous, cutting electricity to thousands of homes.

A second major inferno was blazing near the town of Kingston in the state's southeast, directly threatening a number of farms, it added.

The fire service warned people in the area to take shelter in a solid structure immediately and to stay off the roads.

"You should not attempt to leave or enter this area as the roads will not be safe," it said in a warning.

Another Port Lincoln resident, identified only as Jeff, told the ABC he could see "exploding big flames" streaming from the fire, adding that "some of them look to be at least 100-foot high".

Much of the state had been declared at catastrophic risk, as temperatures soared above 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit) and strong winds buffeted the region.

Catastrophic or Code Red conditions are considered on a par with those experienced ahead of the so-called Black Saturday fires in February -- Australia's worst disaster of modern times.

Residents cannot be forcibly evacuated but are strongly advised to abandon their property due to extreme risk of death or injury.

A cool change was expected to sweep through late Wednesday, bringing welcome rain for fire crews.

Meanwhile small communities in Western Australia's Pilbara region began mopping up on Wednesday after tropical Cyclone Laurence swept through, flattening buildings and uprooting trees.

The cyclone was sweeping eastward across the state but had been downgraded to a Category 1 storm -- the lowest rating -- and was expected to weaken further as it heads inland, officials said.

Meteorologists said it was expected to bring intense rainfall for drought-parched areas in central New South Wales (NSW) state, with major flooding expected.

"This event could bring the heaviest widespread rainfall to northern inland NSW for over a decade," said regional weather director Barry Hanstrum.
 

TeeKee

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Loyal
AGAIN??

Singapore firm to fight Australia fires suit

(AFP) – Feb 16, 2009

MELBOURNE (AFP) — Singapore-owned power utility SP AusNet said Tuesday it would "vigorously defend" a claim against it for compensation over one of Australia's deadly wildfires.

Survivors have reportedly launched a lawsuit alleging that a downed power line sparked a fire that killed more than 100 people and destroyed about 1,000 homes in the Kinglake area of Victoria state earlier this month.

The claim against SP Ausnet, part of the Singapore Power Group, is expected to run to hundreds of millions of dollars, the national AAP news agency said.

The company said only that it had been notified that a writ was filed on Monday alleging that "faulty and/or defective power lines" caused loss and damage.

"SP AusNet believes the claim is both premature and inappropriate," the company said in a statement to the Australian stock exchange.

"However, SP AusNet will vigorously defend the claim," it said. "If the claim is pursued, SP AusNet advises that it has liability insurance which provides cover for bushfire liability."

At least 189 people died in a swarm of wildfires which swept through Victoria as a heatwave produced tinder-box conditions over the weekend of February 7-8.

Some of the fires are believed to have started naturally or accidentally, while arson is suspected in others.

Victorian member of parliament Fran Bailey said Sunday the Country Fire Authority had told her a power line had broken before the Kinglake fire, AAP reported.

"It was whipping against the ground and sparked," she said.

Victoria police Chief Commissioner Christine Nixon said Sunday authorities were still determining how the Kinglake fire started.

"At this stage we are not able to confirm how it started. I understand there is some legal action that people are taking, but at this stage we're still investigating its cause," she told Channel Nine television.

The commission of inquiry into the fires will provide an interim report by August 17.

Copyright © 2009 AFP. All rights reserved. More »
 
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