Smoke
blankets Melbourne as fire danger peaks
Smoke
has blanketed Melbourne's CBD as the stifling heat and vicious winds
that fuelled the Gippsland bushfire last week are expected to be
repeated, emergency services have warned.
24
January, 2013
The
Gippsland blaze has now burnt more than 60,000 hectares, destroyed
houses and killed one person, and could flare again despite the close
watch of firefighters.
About
80 firefighters were working on the control lines, east of
Harrietville, on Thursday morning as the temperature began to climb
to a forecast 37 degrees.
The
blaze, which is about 1300 hectares in size, is burning about four
kilometres north-east of Harrietville in the Alpine National Park.
Emergency services expect the fire to hit the township and Hotham
Heights within the next 24 hours.
At
this stage the Country Fire Authority has advised residents to "watch
and act", meaning they should decide whether to stay and defend
their properties if they have a bushfire survival plan or leave. The
highest alert "emergency", which means imminent danger, has
not been activated.
Lightning
strikes are believed to have ignited the fire on Monday night.
Community
meetings have been arranged for Thursday. The first will be held at
the Bright Community Centre on Railway Avenue at 11am, and second
will be at the Mount Beauty Community Centre in Holland Street at
2pm.
Parks
Victoria has closed 10 state forests and parts of the Alpine National
Park until further notice. Falls Creek, Hotham Heights and Bogong
state forests are among those closed.
Fire
Services Commissioner Craig Lapsley implored people to use common
sense around bushfires, saying that hikers had started walks around
Harrietville on Wednesday morning despite the nearby blaze and smoke
being visible in the area.
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