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View Full Version : Catastrophic Tasmanian Bushfires 2013


Infidelitas
January 5th, 2013, 03:55 AM
HOMES have been destroyed and police are investigating reports of at least one death following the devastating bushfires that raged in Tasmania yesterday.

On a day of record heat and catastrophic bushfire conditions, up to 40 bushfires blazed across the state -- destroying more than 80 properties and leaving hundreds of people cut off from their homes as they took refuge in shelters last night.

The hardest-hit community Dunalley, in the south-east, where 65 properties were lost.

Police are investigating a report that a man died as he fought to protect his Dunalley home.

Police said 15 properties were lost at nearby Boomer Bay, where about 50 people stranded at the beach were being evacuated by boat.

A number of properties were also destroyed at Connellys Marsh, west of Dunalley.

Fire raged out of control in Carlton River last night, threatening the popularl coastal community of Dodges Ferry.

Just before 11pm, residents of Dodges Ferry were warned it was too dangerous to leave and advised to take shelter at the local primary school only if the path was clear.

It was also too late to leave Primose Sands, Connellys Marsh and Susans Bay because Carlton River Rd was impassable and not safe.

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The second biggest fire raged out of control at Lake Repulse, in the Upper Derwent Valley affecting communities including Broad River, Jones River and Ellendale.

And a blaze near Bicheno, on the East Coast, destroyed at least one property.

A large grass fire at Epping Forest in the state's North was also causing concern last night.

Hundreds of evacuated and homeless residents were seeking refuge in emergency shelters. The most crowded catered for 600 people at the Nubeena District High School.

Another group of people is sheltering at the Dunalley Hotel.

About 40 people were taking shelter at Sorell refuge last night and a further 40 at New Norfolk.

Bushfire conditions reached "catastrophic" yesterday, with temperatures soaring to ajl record 41.8C in Hobart. Acting Premier Bryan Green said the day was "devastating".

He said an emergency relief fund had been set up to which would provide $750 to people to help with their initial displacement.

An emergency crew of police, ambulance and fire officers flew into Dunalley last night to investigate the reported death.

Acting Police Commissioner Scott Tilyard said conditions were so severe that it would be difficult to confirm the report until either later today or early tomorrow.

He said: "We can't rule out that there has been a loss of life, potentially one but at this stage there could be (others)."

He said the reported death came from a fire crew at Dunalley, who saw the man defending his home.

Tasmania Fire Service Chief Officer Mike Brown said 100 fire crews had been fighting fires around the state.

He said the fire at Lake Repulse appeared to have been started by an abandoned camp fire.

Other fires on the Freycinet Peninsula had been started by lightning, while the cause of the fire that swept through Dunalley was unknown.

Mr Brown said the Dunalley fire had started on Thursday at Forcett.

The fire had isolated the Tasman Peninsula as police set up a road block on the Arthur Highway.

Last night, police vessels were ferrying fuel, generators, medical supplies and other items to Dunalley and to the refuge centres at Nubeena.

Police were also working with Telstra to transport generators and other equipment to start restoration of communication where possible.

There were fears Eaglehawk Neck could be damaged by ember attack from the Dunalley fire but it was hoped conditions would ease today.

However, Mr Brown warned an expected southerly change could also spread the danger.

"As we get the change, the flank of the fire could become the front of the fire," he said.

The Bicheno fire led to road closures at Friendly Beaches Rd, Courland Bay Rd, Tar Hill Fire Trail and Harveys Farm Rd.

Butlers Point campers were evacuated late yesterday, while Courland Bay shack owners were told to implement their bushfire protection plan.

Emergency alert status remained in place last night for the Forcett and Lake Repulse blazes, with residents told not to return to their homes until the danger passes.

Fires are also burning at Nubeena, Four Mile Creek, Steppes and Whitemark.

http://www.themercury.com.au/article/2013/01/05/369692_todays-news.html


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I can't believe it... I just can't. It's so close.

Guillermo
January 6th, 2013, 07:07 PM
Update:

6 January 2013 Last updated at 06:26 ET

Australia bushfires: Tasmania search for 100 'missing'

Australian police are searching fire-ravaged towns in southern Tasmania looking for 100 unaccounted people.

Tasmania's police commissioner said he feared lives may have been lost in the wildfires which swept through parts of the island in recent days.

Almost 3,000 people have been evacuated from their homes, many stranded in emergency shelters.

On Friday, Tasmania experienced its peak temperature since records began with levels hitting 41.8C.

The national weather bureau has warned extremely hot conditions are expected across much of the country next week.

Acting Tasmania Police Commissioner Scott Tilyard said about 100 remained unaccounted for.

"That's not to say that those people necessarily have come to any harm, but obviously we can't totally eliminate that until we've had confirmed contact with those individuals," Mr Tilyard said.

He said the crews, whose numbers have been swelled by relief teams from mainland Australia, were expecting to find "one or more" people who had perished in the fires.


More than 40 fires are still burning. On Sunday, firefighters issued an emergency warning for residents of Taranna, 29 miles (47km) east of the state capital, Hobart, where a fire has been burning for more than three days.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard is due to tour Dunalley on Monday, where more than 65 homes, the police station and a school have been destroyed in the small town, 56km east of Hobart.

The BBC's Nick Bryant, in Sydney, says large swathes of south-east Australia are suffering from the worst fire conditions since the Black Saturday disaster almost four years ago, when 173 people in rural Victoria lost their lives.

He says there has been a combination of a record-breaking heatwave, high winds and drought, with Tasmania by far the worst hit.

From BBC News (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-20925716)

ReginaGeorge
January 6th, 2013, 09:32 PM
I've only seen small things about this on the news, I didn't know the extent. It's awful. It's so awful. How is the news not covering this more? It's awful. It's just awful. I really hope there are minimal deaths. :( Tasmania is so small, but yet there are so many fires.

Infidelitas
January 6th, 2013, 09:55 PM
How is the news not covering this more?

Because Tasmania is too small, and people think a cat stuck up a tree is more important than what's happened here. Some people think we're apart of the state of Victoria.