General
Eastern Australia: Firefighter dies while battling inferno
On Monday, while fighting bush fires raging across Eastern Australia, a volunteer firefighter lost his life.
The Rural Fire Service said in a statement that the firefighter died when his truck overturned at Jingellic, 70 kilometres east of the New South Wales town of Albury as a result of being hit by an extreme wind.
It is the third death of a volunteer firefighter since the fires broke out in October; at least 90 per cent of the firefighters battling the hundreds of blazes along the east coast are unpaid volunteers who leave their work to defend their communities.
Reports have it that two other firefighters suffered burns in the incident.
“A brave firefighter has lost their life protecting the community east of Albury. Words fail at times like this,” New South Wales Premier Gladys Berejiklian said on Twitter.
Albury is close to the border of the state of Victoria, where firefighters battled an outbreak of new fires as a heatwave swept across the continent and caused thousands to evacuate.
Fire authorities in Victoria on the weekend told residents and holidaymakers in the Gippsland region, 322 kilometres east of Melbourne, to evacuate in anticipation of extreme fire conditions.
Victoria’s Emergency Management Commissioner Andrew Crisp told reporters Monday that those who had not left the holiday town of Lakes Entrance by midday were trapped, as fires had blocked the only access roads.
An estimated 30,000 holidaymakers were in the region, and not all had heeded evacuation warning, he said.
Crisp said fire crews were fighting flames that were leaping 20 metres into the air and smoke columns rising 14 kilometres in extreme conditions that created its own weather.
“There’s lightning coming out of these smoke columns.
“It is dangerous out there and people need to stay tuned to their local conditions so they can make good decisions,” Crisp added.
The Bureau of Meteorology said the heatwave brought temperatures in Victoria above 40 degrees and fire conditions would be made more dangerous by an expected wind change due late on Monday.
The heatwave is expected to arrive in the Sydney region Tuesday where firefighters are bracing for deteriorating conditions on New Year’s Eve.
The Bureau of Meteorology predicted western Sydney will reach 44 degrees Tuesday with some inland towns being hit with 45 degrees.
Winds are expected to pick up to 50 to 60 kilometres an hour, gusting to 80 kilometres an hour.
NAN
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