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Australia bushfires rage

SYDNEY: Bushfires raged out of control across Australia’s most populous state on Tuesday, fanned by intense heat and high winds in “catastrophic” conditions that threatened homes and triggered evacuations.


Over 130 fires were burning across New South Wales state, 40 of them uncontained, state Rural Fire Service commissioner Shane Fitzsimmons told reporters in Sydney.

“You don’t get conditions worse than this, we are at the catastrophic level,” he said.

Introduced after the 2009 Black Saturday firestorm in Victoria state, which claimed 173 lives, a “catastrophic” rating means fires will be uncontrollable, unpredictable and fast-moving, with evacuation being the only safe option.

New South Wales faced one of the highest-risk fire days in its history, fanned by high winds and tempera-tures reaching 45 degrees Celsius (113 degrees Fahrenheit) in parts of the state.

“Fortunately, we’ve got no reports of people’s homes being damaged or destroyed at this stage,” Fitz-simmons said.

While no deaths had been reported, officials remained on alert, with particular concerns about the regions of Shoalhaven, Illawarra and Southern Ranges south of Sydney, all popular summer holiday locations.

Shoalhaven Mayor Joanna Gash said that the area was a “tinderbox.”

“Things are not looking real good,” she told Sky News.

Gash said that the extreme conditions had not been seen before.

“A catastrophic fire is one you don’t really fight. You just try to get people to safety,” she said.

Also in southern New South Wales, authorities warned that an out-of-control grass fire was encroaching on properties in Brogo, about 160 kilometers (100 miles) south of the national capital Canberra.

“We just looked at each other and said ‘We’re leaving,’” Brogo resident Hallie Fernandez-Markov told Agence France-Presse from the town of Cobargo, where she was staying with friends after fleeing her guest house.

Much of southern Australia is enduring a summer heatwave and a total fire ban is in place throughout New South Wales, while all national parks are closed, with temperatures topping 42 Celsius in Sydney and hitting 45 in the state’s west.

Temperatures have soared so high, and are expected to continue climbing, that the Bureau of Meteorology was forced to add new colors—deep purple and pink—to its charts for forecasts above the previous limit of 50 Celsius.

Fitzsimmons said that while cooler weather had begun to sweep in from the south, seeing temperatures in some areas plummet from 40 degrees Celsius to 24 in minutes, the front was moving slowly and would take hours to cover the state.

“We still have hours of hot, dry, difficult conditions ahead of us,” he said.

There were also extreme conditions in Victoria on Tuesday, with one fire at the town of Kentbruck, in the state’s southwest, burning out of control with 400 firefighters battling to stop it threatening rural communities.

Wildfires destroyed over 100 homes in Tasmania over the weekend, and around 40 blazes were still burning across the southern island state but the immediate threat to homes was believed to have passed.

Tasmanian police, who on Tuesday continued searching burned out properties, said that no bodies had been discovered so far.

Initial reports said that at least 100 people could be missing, but police said that there was much confusion about movements during the crisis and that there was only “a handful” of people they were making serious inquiries to locate quickly.

Fires are a regular occurrence in vast but sparsely populated and arid Australia, particularly in the hot summer months between December and February.

The last four months of 2012 were abnormally hot across the nation and the warm conditions have been exacerbated by very dry conditions due to the delayed start to a weak monsoon.

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