California wildfires rage, nine dead

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A Cal Fire fighter sprays water on a home next to a burning home as the Camp Fire moves through the area in Magalia, California. — AFP photo

PARADISE, United States: Nine people were killed and hundreds of thousands ordered to evacuate as wildfires raged yesterday across California, with one rapidly spreading blaze threatening the resort of Malibu, home to Hollywood stars.

The fatalities were reported in a massive late-season inferno in the town of Paradise, in Butte County north of the state capital Sacramento, where some 6,700 structures went up in flames – officially becoming California’s most destructive fire on record.

The fast-moving blaze, which authorities have named the ‘Camp Fire’, broke out Thursday morning. Fanned by strong winds, it has scorched 36,400 hectares and is only five per cent contained, the California Fire Department (Cal Fire) said late Friday.

Other large fires raged in southern California, including one just north of Los Angeles and another in Ventura County near Thousand Oaks, where a Marine Corps veteran shot dead 12 people in a country music bar on Wednesday night.

“The magnitude of destruction we have seen is really unbelievable and heartbreaking and our hearts go to everybody who has been affected by this,” said Mark Ghilarducci, the director of the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services.

Governor-elect Gavin Newsom declared a state of emergency to provide assistance to the fire-hit areas.

Late Friday Butte County Sheriff Korey Honea said it was his ‘sad duty’ to update the Camp Fire death toll to nine.

“I don’t have all of the details because we have investigators out on the field” trying to reach the locations where casualties were reported, Honea told a press conference.

But he did say that four people were found inside a vehicle in the Paradise area, while another was found nearby outside the vehicle. Three more were found outside a residence, and one inside a house.

Dozens of other people were reported missing.

Residents who escaped Paradise posted harrowing videos to social media as they drove through tunnels of swirling smoke and orange flames to outrun the wildfire.

The flames destroyed hundreds of homes, a hospital, a gas station, several restaurants and numerous vehicles, officials said.

Mandatory evacuation orders were issued for more than 52,000 people in the scenic area in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains.

“The whole lower side of Paradise is totally engulfed in flames right now,” Kevin Winstead, a resident of nearby Magalia, told KIEM TV. “All of it is engulfed in flames right now.

“Not one home will be left standing,” he said. “I’m devastated.”

“We’re just hoping that our brand new home that we were hoping to move into tomorrow is not burned to the ground,” Winstead said.

In southern California, authorities said some 200,000 people are under evacuation orders.

The ‘Woolsey Fire’ has jumped Highway 101 near the town of Agoura Hills and portions of the main coastal north-south artery have been shut down, triggering mandatory evacuations, including the entire city of Malibu. — AFP