Strong winds whip up fierce Sydney bushfires
Date: 09-Dec-02
Country: AUSTRALIA
Author: Michael Christie
While a splash of rain and easing temperatures brought some relief for firefighters battling blazes to Sydney's south and in the Blue Mountains to the west, gale-force winds whipped up fires that have destroyed up to 20 homes in the city's north.
New South Wales rural fire service spokesman John Winters said the bushfire in northern Sydney had doubled in size in the past 24 hours to 16,000 hectares (39,540 acres), and the light rain that fell overnight had done little to douse its ferocity.
"It really has been just a temporary lull," he said.
Three thousand firefighters and at least 80 water-bombing aircraft have joined the battle against what officials say are the worst bushfires to hit Sydney in at least three decades.
Reinforcements were due to arrive from the Australian states of Victoria and South Australia last week and Saturday to help their firemen colleagues in New South Wales.
With the island continent of 20 million in the grip of one of the most severe droughts in a century, the authorities have been warning since the first bushfires flared in the southern hemisphere's winter month of July that this season could be worse than last Christmas, when Sydney was ringed by flames.
Traffic chaos loomed for the city of four million last week as trucks, unable to come into Sydney from the north or to get out, parked on roadsides in lines that were tens of kilometres (miles) long.
Local television showed thick smoke blanketing the city's main thoroughfares to central and northern New South Wales state, while bright orange sparks, whipped up by 80 km (60 mile) per hour winds, swept across the tarmac in waves.
Trees were also being felled by the flames and were crashing down onto the roads.
Police organised a few escorted convoys during the night to ease some of the congestion but no cars or lorries carrying flammable goods or livestock were allowed through.
Since the fires began on Wednesday, some allegedly lit by arsonists, up to 20 houses have burned to the ground. One 73-year-old man died from an apparent heart attack while trying to save his horses and home.
Fires are natural to the combustible Australian bush, and often lit by lightning.
But the latest fire emergency to strike Sydney did not coincide with any storms and officials are blaming human intervention - either deliberate or accidental.
An 18-year-old was due to appear in court last week, charged with lighting a fire in the southwest that swept through Sydney's main army barracks, local media reported.








