Advertisement
Advertisement
Australia
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Firefighters battle a blaze on Fingerfield road at the Deepwater National Park area of Queensland on November 29, 2018. Photo: AFP

Man dies in Australia bush fire, as Queensland evacuations continue

  • Two men were arrested for starting fires near the state’s central coast, while more than 100 fires continued to burn across the region
Australia

A central Queensland man has died and 10 people including seven children who were caught up in the state’s bush fires have had to be airlifted to safety, as authorities urged residents in the path of the Deepwater bush fire to leave the area immediately.

The man died after being hit by a falling tree while clearing a firebreak on his family’s property south of Emerald.

Smouldering woods of Blackwater creek crossing in the Deepwater National Park area of Queensland on November 29, 2018. Photo: AFP

As two men were arrested for starting fires in central Queensland, more than 100 fires continued to burn across the state. Heatwave conditions were expected to continue over the weekend and the prospect of an incoming cyclone threatened to complicate things further.

The Queensland fire and emergency service (QFES) said on Friday night an “extremely large and unpredictable fire” was fast approaching communities in Deepwater, Baffle Creek, Rules Beach and Oyster Creek.

Residents there were urged to evacuate to the nearby Miriam Vale Community Centre. They were warned that firefighters may not be able to protect homes.

“You should not expect a firefighter at your door,” QFES said in a statement.

On Friday night at the rainforest area of Eungella, west of Mackay, 10 people, including six children and an infant, were airlifted out of the area. The area had been ringed by fire for days. They were flown to the Finch Hatton showgrounds by the RACG CQ Rescue helicopter.

A council worker is seen next to a burnt hill in Mount Larcom. Photo: EPA

The women and children were among about 40 people who had stayed behind at Eungella to help with the firefighting efforts, Mackay mayor Greg Williamson said.

“A lot of people elected to stay and fight,” he said.

Then the fire changed in the dangerous and unpredictable conditions and they decided it was time to get the children and women out.

“The fire is roaring up the hill at Eungella which has been a big shock,” the mayor said. “It just shows how this fire that’s been escalating for the last couple of days has just turned nasty on us.”

A helicopter water bomber fills its tanks from a dam on Costi Farms. Photo: AFP

Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk visited Miriam Vale Community Centre on Friday to thank firefighters and launch a bush fire appeal to help families affected by the disaster.

Palaszczuk said it was too dangerous for people to return to some areas.

“Just yesterday the winds turned so dramatically – 160 degrees – within a couple of hours and the firefighters on the ground and the volunteers had to deal with this changing, evolving situation that is not only putting their lives at risk, but also others,” she said.

More than 10,000 people had been told to leave their homes as the fire crisis unfolded throughout central Queensland.

Nick Schwindt inspects the remains of his burnt water tanks after a bush fire swept through the area Mount Larcom. Photo: EPA

On Friday, a 27-year-old man was arrested for allegedly lighting a grass fire at Port Curtis, south of Rockhampton, while a 26-year-old man was charged with endangering property by fire over an incident also in Rockhampton.

A total fire ban had been issued for the entire Brisbane region for the weekend, while restrictions were also in place for parts of southwest Queensland, including Toowoomba, the Southern and Western Downs and the Maranoa areas until Tuesday.

People in Broken River, Finch Hatton, Kowari Gorge, Eungella, Dalrymple Heights and Crediton were told they should be ready to follow their bush fire plan or prepare to leave as the blaze approached.

A fire burn moving through Deepwater National Park in Queensland. Photo: AP

“If you do not have a plan, or intend to leave, you should be ready to leave the area because the situation could get worse quickly,” the Queensland Fire and Emergency Services said.

The QFES commissioner, Katarina Carroll, said the challenging conditions would persist for days.

“We’ve got a heatwave still with us for the next four days. We’ve got thunderstorms that interfere with how the fire spreads. We have never seen this in our state before”.

Weather forecasters said it had been an extraordinary week of widespread and catastrophic fire dangers, and a protracted heatwave.

There were some early indications that temperatures in central and northern Queensland might return to being closer to average by Thursday, the weather bureau said.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Man dies as 100 bush fires rage in Queensland
Post