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Bushfires have killed at
least eight people in south-eastern Australia since Monday, while two others
remain unaccounted for.
The latest fires, which
raced towards the coast this week, have also destroyed more than 200 homes.
Seven people have been
confirmed dead in New South Wales and one in Victoria.
Conditions have eased
slightly, and a major road that was closed in Victoria was reopened for two
hours on Wednesday to allow people to leave.
But many people remain
in fire-hit areas. In one town, police dropped off 1.6 tonnes of drinking water
by boat.
The seven deaths in New
South Wales include:
Two people found in
separate cars on Wednesday morning
A father and son who
stayed behind to defend their home and farm equipment
A 28-year-old volunteer
firefighter who was killed when wind flipped his fire engine
Family members of Mick
Roberts, a 67-year-old Victorian missing since Monday, confirmed that he had
been found dead in his home in Buchan, East Gippsland.
“Very sad day for us to
(start) the year but we're a bloody tight family and we will never forget our
mate and my beautiful Uncle Mick," his niece Leah Parson said on Facebook.
The deaths bring the
total fire-related fatalities across Australia this season to at least 18, with
warnings this could rise further.
Of the homes destroyed
in this week's blazes, 43 were in East Gippsland, Victoria, while another 176
were in New South Wales.
Earlier on Wednesday,
the New South Wales Rural Fire Service said 916 homes had been destroyed this
season, with another 363 damaged, and 8,159 saved.
In Mallacoota, Victoria -
where thousands fled to the beach on Tuesday - police boats arrived with 1.6
tonnes of water for residents.
They also brought food,
a paramedic and medical supplies.
At the same time, police
warned people in Sunbury, Victoria - about 40km (25 miles) north-west of
Melbourne - to leave the area, as an emergency fire warning was in place.
The smoke from
Wednesday's fires was visible more than 2,000km (1,200 miles) away from the
South Island of New Zealand, where the haze tinted the sky orange.
Earlier, New South Wales
Premier Gladys Berejiklian said workers would take advantage of the milder
weather on Wednesday to clear roads and restore power.
But she said
temperatures were expected to rise again on Saturday.
“At the very least,
weather conditions will be at least as bad as what they were yesterday,"
she said.
The New South Wales fire
service has warned of dangerous conditions for tourists on the south coast of
NSW over the weekend, telling them to leave before Saturday.
Dangerous conditions for
holiday makers on the South Coast of NSW this weekend
With the widespread
power and communications outages across the South Coast please share this
information to as many affected people as possible. #nswrfspic.twitter.com/JvbwrpC1fe
Temperatures are
expected to reach the 40Cs in the south-east into the weekend, exacerbating
already dangerous conditions in fire-ravaged Victoria and New South Wales.
Meteorologists say a
climate system in the Indian Ocean, known as the dipole, is the main driver
behind the extreme heat in Australia.
The fire service warned
they had been unable to reach some people in remote areas of NSW.
“We've got reports of
injuries and burn injuries to members of the public," said New South Wales
rural fire commissioner Shane Fitzsimmons.
“We haven't been able to
get access via roads or via aircraft - it's been socked in [runways have been
closed] or too dangerous."
In Mallacoota, many
people spent the night sleeping in their cars or on deckchairs.
Victoria Emergency Commissioner
Andrew Crisp said - as well as the police vessels - "a large barge"
was sailing from Melbourne to the town with food, water and 30,000 litres of
fuel.
In Cann River, a town
about 80km (50 miles) inland from Mallacoota, residents warned that food
supplies were running low.
Further north in
Ulladulla, New South Wales, people were queuing outside supermarkets - while
cuts to mobile networks and landlines meant people also waited to use
payphones.
The military said
amphibious ships were setting off from Sydney and would arrive in fire-hit
coastal areas of New South Wales and Victoria by Friday.
Meanwhile, a woman from
Mallacoota who took a photo that went viral has spoken about the image.
Allison Marion took the
picture of her 11-year-old son, Finn, moving their family to safety in a
powerboat.
“Finn drove the boat and
my other son looked after the dog in the boat and [I am] very proud of both of
them," she told ABC News.
When the family returned
to land, as conditions eased, they went to check on their home.
“Our street somehow
escaped the fire somehow," she said. "However, I feel for many people
in our community who have lost their homes. It's just truly saddening."
(BBC)