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WSWS : News
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Australian fires: Canberra residents left to fend for themselves
By a WSWS reporting team
29 January 2003
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Just over a week ago, Canberra, the Australian national capital,
was hit by one of the worst fire disasters in the countrys
history. Driven by hot, dry winds, bush fires broke containment
lines on January 17 and engulfed several suburbs the following
day. Four people were killed, over 200 were treated for injuries
and 530 houses and buildings were destroyed. Hundreds more homes
were badly damaged.
Canberra, which is located in the Australian Capital Territory
(ACT), is a city of some 320,000 people. A team of World Socialist
Web Site reporters last week visited the working-class suburbs
of Duffy and Holder, two of the worst affected areas, directly
opposite forest and pine plantations.
The suburbs resembled a battlefield with row after row of burnt-out
homes and the scorched remains of cars. Fires were still burning
on the northern and western outskirts of the city and a smoky
haze covered the area. Homes that survived the flames were uninhabited
and, apart from an occasional resident searching through the ashes
of their homes, the place was almost deserted. Gas, telephone
and other utilities, such as electricity and sewerage, were non-existent.
Power-poles had been incinerated and electric wiring hung across
streets.

Two things soon became evident. Fire precaution and other emergency
measures were woefully inadequate. When the firestorm hit, city
inhabitants were largely left to fend for themselves with government
services in chaos and the leadership of emergency services either
non-existent or seriously unprepared. Senior-deputy captain Peter
Holding, from a New South Wales fire crew, told ABC radio: There
was no field command, [and] there were no group captains there
that knew the area, that were telling us where to go and what
to do.
Secondly, as soon as the firestorm had passed, politicians
and the press immediately tried to silence anyone critical of
emergency planning. Those raising questions were denounced as
white-anters who were responsible for undermining
frontline firefighters. ACT Chief Minister Jon Stanhope accused
critics of damaging the morale of the Emergency Services
Bureau and ... those 400 people we now have out there standing
between this fire and the suburbs of Belconnen.
The real responsibility for the lack of preparation rests with
local and federal governments. A significant issue is the rundown
of professional fire fighting services in Canberra. Until early
last year, the current force of just 290 officers was at least
20 percent understaffed. To cut costs, fire officers who resigned
or retired were not replaced. The service was only brought up
to full strength, with 50 new recruits, just prior to the ACT
election.
The damage, however, had already been done. Low manning levels
prevented the implementation of specialised training programs
over the previous five years. The new recruits lacked experience
and training. This problem combined with a lack of equipmentonly
12 fire tankershampered the determined efforts of professional
fire fighters to help organise and fight the fires.

Despite attempts to quash public discussion, many Canberra
residents, in letters to the local press and interviews with WSWS
reporters, were highly critical of authorities and the lack of
emergency planning.
In a letter to the Canberra Times, Derek Emerson-Elliott
wrote: There was not a single fire unit made available last
Saturday afternoon to assist residents fighting for their homes
in the streets of Weston Creek and North Tuggeranong, where we
suffered our most grievous losses. Why not, and where on earth
where those fire units?
I dont criticise the firemen themselves, brave
and selfless men and women who regularly put their lives at risk
to help us. But surely the armchair strategists, the men in charge
with their maps and theories, have something to explain.
In another letter, local resident Geoff Carter, asked why two
fully trained, fully equipped fire crews, complete with a total
of 11,000 litres of water, were forced to sit idly by, totally
ignored by emergency-services management despite numerous pleas
from the crews themselves to be called into the fray.
Carter later told the WSWS that the spare fire crews were attached
to the Canberra airport and had been used when fires broke out
in Canberra 12 months earlier. These crews, however, were not
mobilised when the fire hit Canberra on January 18. He explained
that Rural Fire Service trucks carried a maximum of 900 litres
of water but the two airport trucks had a far larger capacityone
4,000 litres, the other 7,000 litres.
Thats what stinks. Nothing would have stopped the
fires going into Duffy, but perhaps with these two trucks some
houses a few streets back would have been saved and some peoples
lives would not have been destroyed, he said.
Mark Annetts from the tiny settlement of Uriarra, 18 kilometres
west of Canberra, which was completely devastated by the fires,
told one newspaper: We dont blame the ones
in the yellow coats [fire officers and emergency service workers],
but the others, who were giving the orders have a lot to answer
for. We all have a lot of questions up here and we really want
some answers. Annetts home was one of 17 out of a
total of 24 houses in the small township that were incinerated.
No warning
Many residents were not alerted until moments before the firestorm
hit and pointed to the lack of basic precautions. Others commented
on the impact of cutbacks to government services.
Phyllis Weeks, a pensioner from Eppalock Street, Duffy, where
11 houses were reduced to ashes, told the WSWS she received no
warning and knew nothing about the approaching fire until 10 minutes
before it struck.
I didnt realise what was going on until a neighbour
knocked on the door and asked whether Id heard the news
on the radio? She said, I think youd better get out
and start watering your house down. There was only time
enough for a friend to pick up my daughter, Jane, and her kids
and get out. The street was on fire. My friend told me to get
in the car. I said no, Im staying in my house,
which I did, and whatever caught fire I put out straight away.
The fire just came through like a big fog. It took two
paths and luckily I was on the edge of it. It was completely dark
and it was terrible. Ive never been through a fire before
but you dont have time to stop and think, she said.
Duffy was the worst affected area with three residents killed
and 236 homes burnt down. Among the buildings destroyed was Russell
Carters BP petrol station. Carter told the WSWS that the
fire destroyed most of the garages aboveground fixtures
but miraculously the auto-gas cylinder had not been affected.
Fire fighters later told him that if the cylinder had exploded,
one-third of the working class suburb would have been destroyed
by the blast.

The neighbouring suburb of Holder was also badly hit by the
fire, with 31 homes completely destroyed. Resident Shirley Currie,
whose house was opposite one of the pine plantations, spoke with
WSWS reporters.
I feel that the government has left it all too late.
The sad part about it is theyve been laying people off for
some time, so the forests are not maintained or cleared like they
should be. The area across from my place, for example, should
have been seen to. I was going to ring up about it last week before
this happened.
Unfortunately what they do is they come along and do
the bus stop but still leave great amounts of dried grass over
there in the forest. We had a big storm a few months ago that
knocked trees down. They were never cleared and so there was a
lot of dead stuff that should have been cleaned up but there was
not the manpower to do it.
People have been losing their jobs for quite some time
because the government is cutting back. But if they want forests
or recreation areas, they have to maintain them and cut them back
further from homes, she added.

Currie emphasised that her criticism was directed against the
government: The helpers, and all the people that worked
to try and save everything, are not to blame for this. It goes
back to the government, who is supposed to maintain everything.
Cutting down services when youve got big forests is very
dangerous.
This could have killed hundreds
Another Holder resident, Tony Walter, a retired public servant
who lost his home, told WSWS: Potentially this single event
could have killed hundreds. The greatest miracle is that only
four people were killed. My house is gone and the only thing that
survived is my daughters car. Shes a university student
working in Melbourne at the moment. When she comes home tomorrow
shell be absolutely devastated when she sees all her books,
essays and computer have gone.
Walter managed to get himself and his dog into the car when
the firestorm hit his street but was unable to find his pet cat.
The embers engulfed everything, he said. It
was just after 3:30 pm and absolutely pitch black so I just sat
in the car with the dog. Flames and flying embers surrounded us
and I was beeping the horn and had the headlights and the hazard
flashers on. Then, when there was a lull in the embers and the
flames, I backed the car out of the driveway. The house was absolutely
engulfed. It was extremely hot, like standing in front of a blast
furnace at a steel works.
Jorgen Hauberg, who owned a local equestrian centre, lost 120
stables, 25 horses and 40 kilometres of fencing in the fire. One
of his neighbours was trapped in the fire when the wind turned
and was severely burned. A mother and daughter also suffered bad
burns when they attempted to save their horses in the next paddock.
They were hospitalised and are believed to be on the critical
list.
Hauberg told WSWS that he visited fire brigade headquarters
in Duffy on Saturday morning to find out whether they should evacuate
the equestrian centre. Fire officers told him there was no need
but they seemed very confused and didnt know what was happening.
He told them he had dams on the property and offered to show the
locations so that firefighting helicopters could use the water.
The officer gave us his phone number and said if there
were spot fires that we couldnt control to phone them and
theyd be around with two fire units in no time. About an
hour and a half later the fire came around our back fence. It
was a grass fire, something you could still control so I rang
them and they said there was no way they were coming out.
Hauberg was scornful of government attempts to deflect criticism.
One [excuse] was that the bush fire brigade, which has a
lot of members in our area, was not trained to fight house fires.
Management obviously thinks that the house owners are much better
trained because they are left to do it.
With weeks of hot summer weather ahead and large areas of bushland
and national park still burning in the ACT and the neighbouring
states of Victoria and NSW, Canberra along with other towns and
cities face serious dangers. Just a week after the January 18
fires, emergency service authorities, feared that a 200,000-hectare
fire on the ACT border, combined with a return of hot and windy
conditions, could threaten Canberra with a second major firestorm.
The attempts by local and federal authorities to quell criticism
indicate that little or nothing will be done to prevent another
disaster.
See Also:
Firestorm wreaks havoc in Australias
capital city
[23 January 2003]
Australia's largest
city ringed by fires
[29 December 2001]
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