Tema: Australijos Pokicija ieško padegėjų
Autorius: GK
Data: 2009-02-09 07:45:19
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<h1><big>Australian fire zone a crime scene</big></h1>
<big></big>
<p><big>Suspicions that the worst wildfires
ever to strike Australia were deliberately set led police to declare
crime scenes Monday in towns incinerated by blazes, while investigators
moving into the charred landscape discovered more bodies. The death
toll stood at 130.</big></p>
<p><big>Officials believe arson may be behind at least
some of the more than 400 fires that tore a destructive path across a
vast swath of southern Victoria state over the weekend. Prime Minister
Kevin Rudd, visibly upset during a television interview, reflected
national disgust at the idea.</big></p>
<p><big>"What do you say about anyone like that?" Rudd said. "There's
no words to describe it, other than it's mass murder."</big></p>
<p><big>Police
have sealed off at least two towns — Marysville and Kinglake — where
dozens of deaths occurred — setting up roadside checkpoints and
controlling access to the area.</big></p>
<p><big>Victoria Police Commissioner
Christine Nixon said specialist fire investigators were on the ground
at one fire site, in Churchill, east of Melbourne, and would go to
others.</big></p>
<p><big>Kinglake is "where the most deaths are, but wherever a
death has occurred we investigate that as a crime," Nixon told
Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio.</big></p>
<p><big>Anyone found guilty of lighting a wildfire that causes death
faces 25 years in prison in Victoria.</big></p>
<p><big>At least 750 homes were destroyed. Officials said both the
tolls of human life and property would almost certainly rise.</big></p>
<p><big>While
weather conditions have eased since Saturday's inferno, more than one
dozen fires still burned in Victoria and gusting winds threatened to
fan them toward towns not previously hit. Forecasters said temperatures
may rise again later in the week.</big></p>
<p><big>Blazes have been burning for
weeks in the southeastern state of Victoria but turned deadly Saturday
when searing temperatures and wind blasts created a firestorm that
swept across the region. A long-running drought in the south — the
worst in a century — had left forests extra dry and Saturday's fire
conditions were said to be the worst ever in Australia.</big></p>
<p><big>From the
air, the landscape was blackened as far as the eye could see. Entire
forests were reduced to leafless, charred trunks, farmland to ashes.
The Victoria Country Fire Service said some 850 square miles (2,200
kilometers) were burned out.</big></p>
<p><big>Only five houses were left standing
out of about 40 in one neighborhood of the hard-hit Kinglake district
that an Associated Press news crew flew over. Street after street was
lined by smoldering wrecks of homes, roofs collapsed inward, iron roof
sheets twisted from the heat. The burned-out hulks of cars dotted
roads. A church was smoldering, only one wall with a giant cross etched
in it remained standing.</big></p>
<p><big>Residents were repeatedly advised on
radio and television announcements to initiate their so-called "fire
plan" — whether it be staying in their homes to battle the flames or to
evacuate before the roads became too dangerous. But some of the deaths
were people who were apparently caught by the fire as they fled in
their cars or killed when charred tree limbs fell on their vehicles.
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