2 January, 2019
A mass evacuation is underway in Mallacoota where more than 4,000 locals and holidaymakers have been stranded since the devastating bushfires on New Year's Eve.
The Australian Defence Force arrived at the the wharf in Mallacoota at 7.30am on Friday - just 24 hours before catastrophic weather conditions are forecast to whip up more blazes.
Thousands of people have spent four days in limbo after being told it was too dangerous to leave the seaside town following the bushfires in Tuesday, when hundreds were forced to flee to beach, ready to throw themselves in the water to protect themselves from the blazes.
On Thursday night residents scrambled to check the list to see if they would be part of the Navy's first evacuation voyage, carrying 963 passengers to Western Port in southern Victoria.
Weak or vulnerable people will be given first priority, and the Navy vowed to try to keep family units together.
People begin leaving Mallacoota wharf after the devastating bushfires on New Year's Eve. They are part of one of the biggest evacuations Australia has ever seen
Evacuees make their way to one of two military ships which will be taking bushfire victims in the small coastal town of Mallacoota to Western Port in southern Victoria
Evacuees board a small boat off the Mallacoota wharf as they make their way to military ships for the first voyage to Western Port in southern Victoria
A Mother trapped in Mallacoota breaks down in tears as she holds her toddler in her arms as HMAS Choules prepares to get thousands of tourists away from bushfire ravaged coastline
The military vessel initially hoped to remove some of the most vulnerable people - particularly those suffering with asthma - on Thursday
Weak or vulnerable people will be given first priority, and the Navy vowed to try to keep family units together
On Friday morning evacuees sat in a hall in Mallacoota as they waited to board the military vehicles, known as a 'duck' which can be used on land and sea, before being taken aboard Navy ships HMAS Choules and the MV Sycamore.
The journey is expected to take about 20 hours.
There first of the evacuees to board the boats were seen wearing masks and carrying just a few personal items as they were escorted by military personnel to the wharf.
They were given a safety briefing by Army and Navy members at the jetty.
The are two ships which can carry about 800 people at a time. The HMAS Choules may make a second journey if it is needed.
The military vessel initially hoped to remove some of the most vulnerable people - particularly those suffering with asthma - on Thursday.
But thick smoke made the task virtually impossible.
'Excuse the language but conditions are sh**house off the coast of Mallacoota,' Federal Member for Gippsland Darren Chester tweeted.
Alison Cukier and Craig Thorpe, from Montmorency, chose to flee the small town and endure the likely long and uncomfortable journey because of their 10-year-old child.
'When you have kids here you want to get out for health reasons,' they told the Daily Telegraph.
Some have said they would prefer to stay behind and wait for roads to reopen to transport their cars, caravans and boats, but they've been warned it could be weeks before they get the opportunity to leave.
Smoky conditions have stopped the military from flying in and rescuing people.
Authorities are desperate to evacuate as many people as possible from danger areas before horror conditions escalate again on Saturday.
Temperatures are expected to soar past 40C and strong winds are forecast.
'We have a small window of opportunity,' Assistant Emergency Services Commissioner Deb Abbott told reporters on Thursday.
'It's a window of opportunity for those people to leave now and we want them to leave now.
'These fires have already caused significant damage. They have caused significant loss and our community needs to act now.'
However, the roads were also packed with fleeing holidaymakers trying to escape before the 46C weather hits. Thousands spent Thursday night sleeping on the road after Princes Highway, on the NSW south coast, was closed overnight.
Some had camping chairs, while others laid out bedding as they awaited their freedom.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison has asked for people to be patient as the evacuation process gets underway.
'I know you can have kids in the car and there is anxiety and there is stress and the traffic is not moving quickly but the best thing to do — the best thing that helps those out there volunteering, out there trying to restore some order to these situations — is for everyone to be patient.'
Doctors have declared the smoke in the area an 'extreme health hazard'. Medical resources have also dwindled since roads were cut, but some supplies were brought in by boat.
The treatment was required primarily for children and the vulnerable who had spent days breathing in potentially toxic smoke and pollution from the approaching blazes.
Federal Member for Gippsland Darren Chester said those people also took priority when planning the initial evacuation mission.
'They will pick up any sick or vulnerable people who need to leave and undertake more re-supply missions as the day continues,' Mr Chester said.
'We will have additional heavy lift helicopters in the region helping out from tomorrow to replenish supplies in isolated areas.
Children under school age will need to be evacuated via air. Only people who are healthy and able-bodied enough to climb up stairs on the ship and withstand 'difficult' conditions will be able to board.
There will be 'a few hundred beds' on board the ship, but people should be prepared to spend much of the 17 hour trip sitting on the outer deck.
There are fears the water has been contaminated and food and fuel supplies have dwindled in the small town. Roads in and out of town are not predicted to open again for weeks.
The HMAS Choules and the MV Sycamore, a defence contracted training vessel, had begun bringing supplies and a rescue plan on Thursday morning.
Troops in helicopters also appeared, bringing with them food, water, fuel and medical supplies for people who are trapped.
Their arrival came as a woman broke down in tears in front of reporters on Thursday when asked to discuss the fires.
The woman welled up while holding her son and trying to protect his face from the smoke on a pier waiting for assistance from the military ships.
She stepped away from cameras before quickly shaking her head no when asked if her own home had been affected.
A state of disaster was declared in Victoria on Thursday night, while NSW is in a seven-day state of emergency, and tourists told to leave evacuation areas (marked in red)
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