By DPA,
Los Angeles : After four days of widespread devastation firefighters Tuesday managed to bring three large fires under control and evacuated residents returned to find hundreds of homes gutted by the flames.
Aided by lighter winds Monday, firefighters in southern California were gaining the upper hand on three wildfires that have devastated the region. They were hopeful of containing the blazes by mid-week.
The fires have destroyed hundreds of homes since Thursday, including 500 mobile homes in Sylmar, east of Los Angeles. More than 100 homes in the luxurious celebrity enclave of Montecito, northwest of Los Angeles, also went up in flames while 120 homes in Yorba Linda south of Los Angeles were also destroyed.
According to figures released Tuesday by Cal Fire and the National Inter-agency Fire Centre, the Triangle Complex fire had burnt 11,600 hectares and 155 structures, and was 75 percent contained. The Sayre fire had burnt 4,400 hectares and 604 structures and was also 70 percent contained. The Tea Fire had burnt 800 hectares and 210 structures and was fully contained.
More than 5,800 firefighters were still mopping up hotspots to prevent fires reigniting. But with the winds that fanned the flames dying down fire chiefs were confident enough to allow most of the 50,000 evacuees to return home.
“The firefight is over,” said Marlene Heisey, an information officer with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.
Fire officials said they had not yet determined the cause of any of the fires, but had ruled out natural causes in the case of Montecito’s Tea Fire. The fires were fanned by seasonal Santa Ana winds that gust in from the eastern desert, blowing warm dry air at speeds exceeding 110 km per hour, transferring burning embers from tree to tree and house to house.
California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger declared a state of emergency in five counties and called for tougher standards for mobile home construction after the extent of the destruction at the mobile home park became clear. He also asked the Bush administration to declare Southern California a federal disaster site and requested disaster loans for the counties of Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, Santa Barbara and San Bernardino where he said many of the residents affected by the fires – particularly mobile home owners – lacked insurance or were seriously underinsured.
The latest round of fires exacerbated what had already been a disastrous wildfire year for California, where more than 624,000 hectares had burnt before the latest wildfires, compared to 608,000 hectares last year.