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Los Angeles fires live updates: Official death toll rises to 24

By Andrew Marszal
AFP·
5 mins to read

Dangerous winds have returned to Los Angeles, threatening to worsen wildfires that have killed 16 people. Video / AFP
  • Dangerous winds have returned to Los Angeles, threatening to worsen wildfires that have killed 24 people.
  • Firefighters are prepared with new resources, but evacuations and search operations continue amid high winds.
  • Video footage show “fire tornadoes” – red-hot spirals that occur when a blaze is so intense it creates its own weather system.

Wildfire-ravaged Los Angeles confronts the return of dangerous winds, as officials vow firefighters are ready to combat any new blazes whipped up by furious gusts.

At least 24 people have been confirmed dead from infernos that have ripped through the United States’ second-largest city for five days, reducing whole communities to scorched rubble and leaving thousands without homes.

Despite massive firefighting efforts, the largest fire spread toward upscale Brentwood and the densely populated San Fernando Valley, as winds up to 80km per hour hit on Sunday, local time.

Conditions are set to dramatically worsen, with “extreme fire behaviour and life threatening conditions” to peak with 112km/h winds in a rare “particularly dangerous situation [PDS]” declared from early Tuesday, said National Weather Service meteorologist Rose Schoenfeld.

Firefighters were seen monitoring the Palisades fire over the weekend, as it spread near the Mandeville Canyon neighbourhood and Encino, forcing new evacuations. Photo / AFP
Firefighters were seen monitoring the Palisades fire over the weekend, as it spread near the Mandeville Canyon neighbourhood and Encino, forcing new evacuations. Photo / AFP

These could fan flames and whip up embers from existing burn zones into new areas, firefighters warned.

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Los Angeles County Fire Department chief Anthony Marrone said his department had received resources including dozens of new water trucks and firefighters from far afield, and was primed to face the renewed threat.

Questioned whether hydrants could run dry again, as they did during the initial outbreak of fires last week, Mayor Karen Bass replied: “I believe the city is prepared.”

Frustration mounted as evacuees waited all day at disaster zone perimeters, hoping to be allowed to visit their homes and try to retrieve vital medication and pets.

Search for bodies

But Sheriff Robert Luna said escorts into these areas were being suspended on Sunday with the return of high winds, dangerous conditions among the wreckage, and the need to retrieve victims' bodies.

Search-and-rescue operations for fatalities were only just beginning, and “as these searches continue, I unfortunately anticipate that those numbers will increase,” he said.

A cadaver dog, from the Los Angeles County Sheriff, sniffs through the rubble of beachfront properties destroyed by the Palisades Fire along the Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu. Photo / AFP
A cadaver dog, from the Los Angeles County Sheriff, sniffs through the rubble of beachfront properties destroyed by the Palisades Fire along the Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu. Photo / AFP

Several more arrests of looters were made, including one burglar who had dressed as a firefighter to steal from homes.

Night-time curfews in evacuated zones have been extended, and additional National Guard resources have been requested.

Prevented from entering an evacuation zone, Altadena resident Bobby Salman, 42, said: “I have to be there to protect my family, my wife, my kids, my mom and I cannot even go and see them.”

In the ravaged Pacific Palisades neighbourhood, a handwritten sign saying “looters will be shot” was hung on a tree outside a home, next to the US flag.

‘Fire tornadoes’

The Palisades Fire grew overnight to 9500ha burnt, and was just 11% contained.

Video footage showed “fire tornadoes” – red-hot spirals that occur when a blaze is so intense it creates its own weather system.

The ferocious fire also left streaks of molten metal flowing from burnt-out cars.

But containment of the 5600ha Eaton Fire in Altadena almost doubled, new figures showed, with 27% of its perimeter controlled.

The total number of residents under evacuation orders dropped to around 100,000, from a peak of almost 180,000.

A firefighting helicopter drops water as the Palisades Fire grows near the Mandeville Canyon neighbourhood and Encino, California. Photo / AFP
A firefighting helicopter drops water as the Palisades Fire grows near the Mandeville Canyon neighbourhood and Encino, California. Photo / AFP

The sudden rush of people needing somewhere to live has posed a growing problem for the city, with reports of illegal price gouging from opportunistic landlords.

“I’m back on the market with tens of thousands of people,” said a man who gave his name as Brian, whose rent-controlled apartment had burned. “That doesn’t bode well.”

Trump: ‘Worst catastrophes’

President-elect Donald Trump has accused California officials of incompetence.

“This is one of the worst catastrophes in the history of our Country. They just can’t put out the fires. What’s wrong with them?” Trump said on his Truth Social platform.

Officials including Mayor Bass said they had not personally spoken with the incoming President, but that potential timings for Trump to visit the disaster scenes were being discussed.

Firefighters work in the Mandeville Canyon neighbourhood of Los Angeles. Photo / AFP
Firefighters work in the Mandeville Canyon neighbourhood of Los Angeles. Photo / AFP

President Biden was due to meet key officials later on Sunday for a briefing on efforts to suppress the wildfires, the White House said.

A huge investigation by federal and local authorities was under way to determine what caused the blazes.

California Governor Gavin Newsom told Meet the Press he was also launching a “Marshall Plan” as the city looks to rebuild.

“We already have a team looking at reimagining LA 2.0,” he said.

He also stressed the immediate problem of weather conditions, saying “the challenge is the winds. We’ve got these winds coming back this evening, Sunday night. We’ve got peak winds on Monday”.

While the ignition of a wildfire can be deliberate, they are often natural, and a vital part of an environment’s life cycle.

But urban sprawl puts people more frequently in harm’s way, and the changing climate – supercharged by humanity’s unchecked use of fossil fuels – is exacerbating the conditions that give rise to destructive blazes.

- Agence France-Presse

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