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WSWS : News
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Firestorm wreaks havoc in Australias capital city
By Richard Phillips
23 January 2003
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Four people were killed, hundreds injured and 530 homes destroyed
when bushfires engulfed the southern and western suburbs of Canberra,
Australias national capital, last Saturday afternoon. Shops,
a high school, health centre, water treatment plant, fire station,
RSPCA animal hospital and the Mount Stromlo Observatory were among
the facilities incinerated.
The disaster, the worst-ever to affect the city of 320,000
people, has left thousands homeless and many without electricity,
telephone, gas, water and sewerage services. Over 2,500 people
were evacuated from their homes, with 300 treated for burns and
smoke inhalation and 60 hospitalised. On Sunday, local authorities
called on residents to reduce their use of showers and baths and
minimise their use of toilets in an effort to prevent raw sewage
being released into the Molonglo River.
Protracted drought, high temperatures and low humidity created
the conditions for the fires, which began on January 8 in the
Brindabella Ranges and the Namadgi National Park, 35 and 50 kilometres
respectively from Canberra. Fanned by strong winds, the blazes
gradually gathered momentum and began moving toward the city.
By Friday they were within 12 kilometres of the suburbs. As
the wind intensified and rapidly changed direction on Saturday,
the fires expanded into a broad, unpredictable front that threw
hot embers and other burning debris up to 10 kilometres ahead.
Australian Capital Territory (ACT) Emergency Services firefighters
heroically attempted to contain the fires but were completely
overwhelmed and by noon Saturday the inferno had broken through
containment lines, raced across grasslands in the south and west
of the city.
One blaze, with flames shooting 60 metres into the air, consumed
pine forest plantations near Mount Stromlo and then moved into
the western suburbs of Duffy, Chapman and Holder. Another swept
out of the Brindabella Ranges toward Belconnen in the northwest
of the city. Other suburbs were hit as embers carried by the high
winds set off spot fires.
Thick smoke grounded the fleet of 14 firefighting helicopters
for most of the day, leaving Canberras grossly under-resourced
fire service, which has only 12 fire tankers and approximately
500 officers, to fight a desperate rearguard action. The fire
service failed to reach most of the burning suburbs.
Residents, many of whom were given no official warning of the
approaching disaster, attempted to save their own homes with garden
houses and water buckets. But these efforts were hampered by failed
water pressure, exploding gas meters, arcing power lines and other
serious hazards.
In Duffy, 236 homes were burnt down and three people diedAlison
Tener, a 37-year-old mother of three, Doug Fraser 60, and Peter
Brooke, 73. The neighbouring suburb of Chapman lost 75 homes and
in Kambah, a southern suburb, 39 houses were destroyed. Some homes
were reduced to rubble in less than 10 minutes. The next day,
streets in these areas resembled war-zones littered with the smoldering
remains of homes, twisted and burnt power poles, fallen power
lines and abandoned, burnt-out cars.
The Mount Stromlo Observatory, one of the oldest in Australia
and an internationally renowned facility, was gutted within minutes.
Five valuable telescopes, a laser centre, workshops, new equipment
and priceless manuscripts and books were destroyed. One of the
worst losses was the highly specialised $2.5 million Near Infrared
Integral Field Spectrograph, the only one in the world. The two-tonne
machine, which scientists had been working on for three years,
was soon to be transported to the Gemini North telescope in Hawaii.
Lack of planning
The ACT government was immediately criticised by residents,
as well as planning and firefighting experts, for its grossly
inadequate response to the emergency, under-resourced firefighting
facilities and the lack of serious prevention measures.
ACT Chief Minister Jon Stanhope denounced the criticism, claiming
it was tantamount to slandering the firefighters and emergency
workers. He declared this was a once-in-a-generation
firestorm, which the government simply did not and could
not possibly have had the capacity to foresee or deal with.
Australian Governor-General Peter Hollingworth backed Stanhope
and Prime Minister Howard warned Canberra residents not to lapse
into an orgy of blame. Hollingworth told the media: You
could never have enough fire engines and could never have enough
equipment to deal with what has happened.
But the catastrophe was entirely predictable. It was a direct
result of inadequate fire prevention planning, insufficient firefighting
resources, the location of residential areas next to pine plantations
and dense bushland, and the failure of ACT emergency services
to act on early predictions issued by the Bureau of Meteorology.
The Bureau of Meteorology warned authorities on January 15
that a disaster was looming. Two days later, it said high winds
and over 37-degree Centigrade (98.6 Fahrenheit) temperatures posed
a serious threat to the city. These warnings, however, were not
taken seriously. Last Friday, residents were told they should
not be unduly concerned and at noon on Saturday, just
before the fire charged out of the surrounding hills, Canberra
fire authorities said the threat to suburban homes was slim.
Two hours later, at 2.05pm, the Emergency Services Bureau called
on residents to return to their homes and begin taking defensive
precautions. Forty minutes later, a State of Emergency was declared
and within another hour and a half, houses in Duffy were aflame.
Firefighters have bluntly criticised the ACT authorities for
its lack of preparation and planning. An unnamed senior NSW fire
officer told the Sydney Morning Herald: They [the
ACT] were in a state of denial. Blind Freddy could have seen what
was about to happen.
According to some reports, offers of equipment and manpower
from the NSW Rural Fire Service were not taken up until it was
too late. Peter Holding, a NSW volunteer firefighter told ABC
radio that he led a convoy of five tankers full of water to Canberra
on Saturday afternoon, only to be left unused by the emergency
centre management.
Some government officials have attempted to blame environmentalists
and national park authorities, accusing them of restricting precautionary
burnoffs and the logging of national forests, but federal and
territory governments have wilfully ignored high level reports
over the last decade or more on the dangers confronting the city.
Consecutive ACT governments failed to act on a special 1994
report, which identified specific problem areas where
ill-prepared residences abutted native and pine forests
with poor access and inadequate fuel reduction zones.
Written by fire expert Howard McBeth, the Fire Hazard Reduction
Practices of the ACT Government report made 40 recommendations
to reduce the impact of the type of disaster that will
occur in the ACT resulting in the loss of life and significant
property damage.
Australasian Fire Authorities Council executive director Len
Foster told the media this week that the Howard governments
refusal last year to support a $16 million request for new firefighting
equipment as part of an integrated national strategy, had contributed
to the catastrophe. The AFAC request included additional helicopters
and planes.
A coronial inquiry will be held into the fire deaths and the
ACT government has said it will investigate the emergency services
response to the disaster. The Howard government has also indicated
that it may investigate the catastrophe. But firefighting unions
have greeted these promises with skepticism.
The United Firefighters Union (UFU), which covers 11,500 professional
firefighters in Australia, has called for a Senate inquiry. UFU
national secretary Peter Marshall said: The question needs
to be answered as to whether such community resources are being
utilised to their full potential in times of crisis.
While the coronial inquiry and other investigations may reveal
some of the major factors that produced the Canberra firestorm,
they are not likely to touch on the essential cause of the disasterthe
dominance of the profit system over the safety and lives of the
citys residents.
Factors such as lack of fire safety planning and the criminally
inadequate provision of only 12 fire tankerswhich could
only fight six house fires at one timefor a city of 320,000
people are not acts of nature, but the product of political decisions
by governments that place the budgetary bottom line above human
life.
This has been further underlined by the contemptuous amount
of government assistance offered to those hit by the disaster.
While more than 500 family homes have been lost, with estimates
that at least a quarter have no insurance and half have no contents
coverage, the ACT government has contributed just $5,000 to families
that lost homes and an additional $5,000 for the uninsured.
Prime Minister Howard toured the fire-damaged areas the day
after the firestorm, declaring his concern for those affected.
But his government has only contributed $500,000 to the Canberra
bushfire recovery appeal, hardly enough to rebuild a few houses,
let alone have any impact on the myriad of problems now facing
thousands of city residents.
Three days after this donation, Howard announced
that he was dispatching Australian troops, ships and airplanes
to join the impending US-led military offensive against Iraq.
The cash and resources expended on this act of aggression would
be more than adequate to repair the basic infrastructure and housing
damaged or destroyed by the Canberra fires.
See Also:
Australia's largest
city ringed by fires
[29 December 2001]
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