Authorities redoubled their efforts to provide supplies and repatriate thousands of people who have been trapped by fire lines in coastal towns for several days.
BS
: Australian officials used a respite on Monday from fierce
wildfires
that have killed 24 people across the country's southeast to race to
reopen blocked roads and evacuate people who have been trapped for
days.
A
second day of light rain and cool winds brought some relief from
heatwave-fuelled blazes that ripped through two states over the
weekend, but officials warned the hazardous weather conditions were
expected to return later in the week.
"There
is no room for complacency," New South Wales state Premier
Gladys Berejiklian told reporters on Monday morning. Two people
remained missing as around 130 fires continued to burn in the state,
though not at a high-alert level.
Authorities
redoubled their efforts on Monday to provide supplies and repatriate
thousands of people who have been trapped by fire lines in coastal
towns for several days.
"This
morning it is all about recovery, making sure people who have been
displaced have somewhere safe (to go) and it is making sure we have
resources to build up the presence on the ground to clean up the
roads, clean up where the rubble exists," Berejiklian said.
Dean
Linton, a resident of Jindabyne in the Snowy Mountains, used the
break from an immediate threat to his town to visit his wife and four
children who had evacuated to Sydney. He also used the 870 kilometre
round trip to pick up a fire-fighting pump and generator to help him
protect the family home.
"There's
a lot of fuel in that national park; it would only take one lightning
strike," Linton told Reuters.
The
bushfire season started earlier than normal this year following a
three-year drought that has left much of the country's bushland
tinder-dry and vulnerable to fires. More than 5 million hectares (12
million acres) of land have been destroyed.
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