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| Monday, 20 January, 2003, 13:45 GMT Eyewitnesses tell of Canberra inferno ![]() Hundreds of Canberra residents lost everything Residents and firefighters in the Australian capital, Canberra - where bush fires killed four people and destroyed hundreds of homes - have been describing the ferocity of the blazes.
Phil Koperberg, the fire commissioner of New South Wales state, told the BBC that the worst might be over, but the threat remained. "We don't expect to see weather conditions again like we saw Saturday, (when) cyclonic winds coupled with firestorms just ravaged the western and northern suburbs of Canberra," he told BBC radio's Today programme. "But there are still a lot of fires." In some cases the flames were hundreds of metres high, Mr Koperberg said. "We saw giant trees being uprooted and being flung burning among the houses, setting fire to them, crushing their roofs." Mr Koperberg praised his men, who had had to deal with horrendous conditions. "Firefighters are telling stories of rocks and stones several centimetres in diameter being blown - like you expect dust and sand to be blown - into their vehicles," he said. Ready to go John Dickinson, a South Canberra resident whose house was about 1.5 kilometres (one mile) away from the fire-front on Sunday night, said the wind had died down overnight and his neighbourhood escaped the flames - but many other areas did not.
He told BBC News Online that while driving through central parts of Canberra on Monday, he saw entire streets where all the houses had been destroyed. "People had been trying to collect belongings as much as they could," Mr Dickinson said. "It looked as if someone had tried to drive a car across a grass verge to escape the fire, and obviously they had escaped on foot because the car had been burnt out." Mr Dickinson says that although the danger seems to have receded in his area, he still feels threatened - especially since strong southern winds are expected later in the week. "We've still got bathtubs and sinks full of water. We've got our car packed with clothes and valuables, so that if we need to get away quickly we can," he said. |
See also: 20 Jan 03 | Science/Nature 19 Jan 03 | Asia-Pacific 06 Dec 02 | Asia-Pacific 05 Dec 02 | Entertainment 04 Dec 02 | Business Internet links: The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites Top Asia-Pacific stories now: Links to more Asia-Pacific stories are at the foot of the page. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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