Nixon may front Royal Commission again

Former Victorian police chief commissioner Christine Nixon may be asked to appear before the Bushfires Royal Commission for a second time.

The embattled head of the Bushfire Reconstruction and Recovery Authority (VBRRA) has made a public apology for leaving the emergency coordination centre and going out for dinner as the Black Saturday disaster unfolded.

A spokesperson for Ms Nixon has confirmed she has been asked if she would be available to reappear before Royal Commission and has indicated she is willing and able to appear again if required.

However it remains to be seen if she will be called again to testify.

Bushfire survivors say thanks

Survivors of the Black Saturday bushfires will thank the people of Victoria today, at an all-day concert in Melbourne.

Free buses will run from Kinglake and surrounding towns to the concert at Federation Square.

The 10-hour event will showcase bands, storytellers and visual artists from the bushfire-affected areas areas.

Organiser, Wally Spezza, says he decided to put on the free concert in appreciation of the donations made by thousands of Victorians.

“There was all this generosity coming from the people of Melbourne and Victoria that really motivated us to get up and do something,” he said.

“It wasn’t just the money, it was the generosity and knowing that so many people were thinking about us and trying to help us.”

Sweeping changes to electricity industry proposed

Lawyers for the Royal Commission into Black Saturday have urged the commissioners to recommend sweeping changes to Victoria’s electricity industry.

Senior counsel assisting the inquiry, Jack Rush QC, told the commissioners five of the eleven major fires on Black Saturday were caused by powerline failures.

He said Victoria’s powerlines were old and proposed the commissioners recommend the single wire transmission lines that serve Victoria’s regional areas be replaced over ten years, perhaps with underground lines.

Mr Rush also proposed a return to more frequent inspection of power lines.

He said the current regulatory regime was “fundamentally weak” and recommended it be reformed to give the regulator more muscle.

Mr Rush recognised the enormity of the task and the massive cost, but said unless changes were made, Victoria would continue to experience the types of losses seen on Black Saturday.

Costly

The electricity company whose powerline has been blamed for starting one of the deadliest fire says it would cost up to $7.5 billion to place all transmission lines underground.

The fire that hit towns like Kinglake has been blamed on a snapped SP AusNet powerline in Kilmore.

Lawyers for SP AusNet have said that would cost between $6.5 billion and $7.5 billion for its network alone.

The power company says the cost would be borne by the Victorian Government and consumers, with an annual price rise of 20 per cent over the next two decades.

SP AusNet urged a more targeted use of undergrounding, depending on things like bushfire risk and terrain.

The lawyer also questioned the justification for replacing powerlines based on age rather than condition.

Victoria police launch manhunt for ‘serial arsonist’

Melbourne, Feb.12 (ANI): Police in the Australian state of Victoria have launched a manhunt for a “serial arsonist” after clearing the two men they had arrested earlier of any wrongdoing in connection with bush fires ravaging the region.

Officers confirmed to the Daily Telegraph that a serial arsonist was being investigated in connection with the Gippsland blaze that has so far claimed 21 lives.

According to the paper, over 150 detectives are working on separate investigations related to the fires across the state. The official death toll remains at 181, but it is expected to rise.

Earlier, police in the state’s northeast arrested two men this morning near Taggerty after reports of “suspicious behaviour between Seymour and Yea in relation to the fires”.

A police spokeswoman told Sky News that they were later released without charge.

Police are close to releasing a photo of the Gippland suspect, Deputy Commissioner Simon Overland said, but he would not comment on a rumor that the suspect is a teenager.

“There has been a serial arsonist in this area for some period time and we have been working on that,” Overland said.

“It’s too early to say whether it was that person that was responsible for the fire that happened on Saturday, but that’s obviously something we will follow through,” he added.

The fire in Marsyville is also being investigated for possible arson because of its ferocity. So far eight deaths have been confirmed in the town but it is feared up to 100 of the town’s 519 people might have died.

Victorian Premier John Brumby today confirmed a 15-hectare grass fire at Mansfield, started on Wednesday, was deliberately lit.

Water bombing aircraft were used to quell the fire, which broke out in a pine plantation southeast of the town.

Fires in East Kilmore, between Yea and Seymour, started on Saturday and merged with the Yea-Murrindindi fire creating the massive Kinglake Complex fire. This fire, which was not started by arsonists, has burnt almost 230,000 hectares of land, destroyed 550 homes and killed at least 147 people in a wide area from Wandong, north of Melbourne to Marysville and Taggerty.

Experts have traced the starting point of the deadly Kinglake fire to a paddock on a hill in Kilmore East. (ANI)

Ten-year-old Oz bushfire survivor clean bowls Ponting

Adelaide, Feb.11 (ANI): He is an international cricketer who has scored over 10,000 runs in Test cricket and over 11,000 runs in one-day internationals, but Australian captain Ricky Ponting failed to get bat to ball against a plucky 10-year-old survivor of Victoria’s bushfires today.

To the crowd’s delight, and with a wry smile, Ponting headed for the sheds as the youngster, Koby, took over batting duties.

“I was actually trying today,” news.com.au quoted a grinning Ponting, as saying.

Not bad for a boy from Kinglake who had the day off because his school Middle Kinglake Primary was razed in Saturday’s inferno.

Ponting’s misfortune at the crease was part of a whirlwind visit by Aussie cricketers to the Whittlesea Tennis and Cricket Club oval which has been transformed into a firefighting staging area and relief centre for those left homeless after the fires that ravaged Kinglake and a string of other small townships in the area.

Cricket-lover Daniel Brown, 20, moved to Kinglake last Wednesday with his girlfriend and two other friends, said the cricketers’ visit would lift the community’s flagging spirits.

Ponting described meeting families traumatised by Saturday’s bushfires as “very moving and very hard”.

Speaking to the media at the cricket oval surrounded by admiring schoolgirls and aspiring teenage cricketers, he said the visit had been confronting.

He said a meeting with one woman inside the Whittlesea Community Centre had been particularly sobering.

The team visit was instigated by vice captain Michael Clarke, who was the only absent member at the oval due to medical advice at training on Tuesday. (ANI)

Oz bushfire death toll rises to 173, towns ruined

Melbourne, Feb.10 (ANI): The bushfire death toll in southern Australia has risen to 173, even as several towns have been completely ruined.

According to news.com.au, the police are hunting down the arsonist believed to be responsible for lighting one of the worst of Victoria fires. They believe they know the identity of the man who allegedly contributed to the Churchill-Jeeralang blaze in Gippsland. Twenty-one people have died in that region.

The death toll from the bushfires was certain to rise further.

Yesterday, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd likened lighting the blazes to mass murder.

Twenty-four fires were still burning and towns remained under threat as authorities moved deeper into the ruins of more than 700 homes which were lost.

Bushfire relief funds were receiving a million dollars in donations per hour yesterday, with 15 million dollars pledged by last night. ictorian Premier John Brumby has vowed to rebuild the razed communities, but as the toll mounts the grim fates of many residents are becoming clearer.

Thirty-five people died in Kinglake alone, while 22 deaths had been confirmed in St Andrews out of a population of just 1500.

Strathewen, with only 200 people prior to the bushfires, had lost 30 residents in the last official count. Firefighters dubbed the tiny town the “Valley of Death”.

A bridge out of town was damaged, leaving those still there as the firestorm swept through with little chance of survival.

Three bodies were found crowded in a bath. The victims may have hoped the water would save them but instead it boiled in the intense heat.

A temporary morgue was set up at Victoria’s State Coronial Services Centre to accommodate the mounting toll of victims. Coroner Jennifer Coate said 101 victims had already been received into the facility.

She said the makeshift morgue was similar to the one set up during the London terrorist bombings.

Concerned relatives were using the Herald Sun’s bushfire message board to post pleas for information about the whereabouts of loved ones. Some had been reunited, while for others the agonising wait for news remained.

Specialist teams used in the aftermath of the Bali bombings were continuing the gruesome task of identifying victims as hundreds of reinforcement firefighters were heading from interstate to relieve crews which had been working nearly non-stop since the emergency began.

The army now has more than 400 soldiers working alongside emergency services.

Brumby said yesterday a royal commission would be held into the fires and the bushfire policy that promoted either leaving early or staying to defend your property. (ANI)

Australian bushfires kill 130, dozens more missing

Australian bushfires kill 130, dozens more missingWeary firefighters and rescuers pulled the remains of dozens of people from charred buildings on Monday as the death toll rose to 130 from southern Australia’s deadliest bushfires.

“Everybody’s gone. Everybody’s gone. Everybody. Their houses are gone. They’re all dead in the houses there. Everybody’s dead,” cried Christopher Harvey, a survivor from Kinglake where most people were killed, as he walked through the town.

Police believe some of the fires, which razed rural towns near the country’s second biggest city, Melbourne, were deliberately lit and declared one devastated town a crime scene.

“There are no words to describe it other than mass murder,” Prime Minister Kevin Rudd told local television.

“These numbers (dead) are numbing … and I fear they will rise further,” he added.

The bushfires are the country’s worst natural disaster in more than a century, and will put pressure on Rudd to deliver a broad new climate policy.

One massive bushfire tore through several towns on Saturday night, destroying everything in its path. Many people died in cars trying to flee the inferno and others were killed huddled in their homes, yet some escaped by taking cover in swimming pools or farm reservoirs or hiding in their cellar.

The inferno was as tall as a four-storey building at one stage and was sparking spot fires 40 km ahead of it as the strong winds blew hot embers in its path.

“It’s going to look like Hiroshima, I tell you. It’s going to look like a nuclear bomb. There are animals dead all over the road,” survivor Chris Harvey told local media.

More than 750 houses were destroyed and some 78 people, with serious burns and injuries, are in hospital.

Many patients had burns to more than 30 percent of their bodies and some injuries were worse than the Bali bombings in 2002, said one doctor at a hospital emergency department.

CLIMATE CHANGE POLICY

Wildfires are a natural annual event in Australia, but this year a combination of scorching weather, drought and tinder-dry bush has created prime conditions.

The fires, and major floods in the Queensland in the north, will put pressure on Rudd who is due to deliver a new climate policy in May. Green politicians are citing the extreme weather to back a tougher climate policy.

Scientists say Australia, with its harsh environment, is set to be one nations most affected nations by climate change.

“Continued increases in greenhouse gases will lead to further warming and drier conditions in southern Australia, so the (fire) risks are likely to slightly worsen,” said Kevin Hennessy at the Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Centre (CSIRO).

The Victorian bushfire tragedy is the worst natural disaster in Australia in 110 years. In 1899, Cyclone Mahina struck Australia’s northern Cape York, killing more than 400.

PLEAS FOR MISSING

Thousands of firefighters continued on Monday to battle the fire and scores of other blazes across the southern state of Victoria, as well as fires in neighbouring New South Wales state.

While cooler, less windy, conditions helped firefighters, 10 major fires remained out of control in Victoria. But the week-long heatwave that triggered the bushfire inferno was over.

The fires burnt out more than 330,000 ha of mostly bushland in Victoria, but a number of vineyards in the Yarra Valley were also destroyed. The Insurance Council of Australia said it was too early to estimate the bill.

As dawn broke in the town of Whittlesea, near Kinglake where most people died, shocked residents wandered the streets, some crying, searching for loved ones still missing.

“The last anyone saw of them, the kids were running in the house, they were blocked in the house,” cried Sam Gents who had not heard from his wife Tina and three young children, aged 6, 13 and 15, since an inferno swept through Kinglake.

“If they let me up the mountain I know where to go (to try and find them),” Gents sobbed. Authorities sealed off Kinglake as bodies were still being recovered.

Handwritten notes pinned to a board in the Whittlesea evacuation centre told the same sad story, with desperate pleas from people for their missing family and friends to contact them.

Rudd said it would take years to rebuild the devastated towns and has announced a A$10 million ($6.8 million) aid package. He has also called in the army to help erect emergency shelter.

The previous worst bushfire tragedy in Australia was in 1983 when 75 people were killed.

Victoria Premier announces Royal Commission to probe bushfires

Melbourne, Feb. 9 (ANI): Victorian Premier John Brumby has announced there will be a Royal Commission into the weekend bushfires.

He made the announcement while touring bushfire-devastated areas today.

Government sources said it had not yet been decided who would chair the commission or when it would start.

One of the key issues to be considered by the inquiry will be Victoria’s decades-old “stay and defend or leave early” bushfire policy.

An emotional Brumby said the Royal Commission would look at all issues.

But he said it was important to remember that nothing could have prevented some of the weekend devastation.

“What broke over the state was like a tsunami,” the Premier said after flying in to an emergency relief centre at Alexandra.

“It didn’t matter how good people’s fire plans were.

“When the wind changed – particularly around Kinglake – when it came back up the hill there was nothing that anybody could have done.

“It wouldn’t have mattered if you had 1000 tankers there.”

Earlier today Premier John Brumby said Victoria may need to review its bushfire policy of “stay and defend or leave early” in light of the state’s appalling weekend death toll of 108 at last count.

Brumby said the Government would this week initiate a full investigation into the fires and the lead-up to them.

He said the Government and authorities’ long-standing approach of advising people to have a bushfire plan ready to either stay to defend their homes or leave well before the fire became a threat had in many cases not saved people at the weekend.

The death toll in Australia’s worst ever bushfires has risen to 107 and, authorities expect it to go up to at least 230.

Fires were still burning out of control and putting towns at risk in the Beechworth and Yackandandah regions in the state’s northeast, even as Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has accused arsonists in Victoria of committing mass murder.

According to The Herald Sun, state emergency officials claimed that some of the fires were deliberately lit, and added that they had also received reports of people returning to relight blazes after fire crews had left an area.

At least 750 homes have been destroyed and 3733 people have registered with the Red Cross after evacuating their properties. The number left homeless is expected to be far higher, the Red Cross said.

It was confirmed that at least four children have died, but that figure would also be expected to rise as full details emerged.

A two-year-old girl was among 13 in intensive care in hospital. Twenty-two people with shocking burns were admitted to the Alfred hospital, the state’s main trauma centre, where staff ran out of morphine trying to ease patients’ pain.

Most of the damage was done by two massive fires – one that virtually wiped out towns northeast of Melbourne, including Kinglake and Marysville with a 100km front – and a second inferno that raced across Gippsland.

TV veteran Brian Naylor and his wife Moiree were among the dead. The pair died when the fire at Kinglake swept through their property.

Six victims were in one car trying to outrun the inferno which swept through Kinglake in minutes. A resident said the town was littered with burnt-out cars and he believed many contained bodies.

Weather conditions have eased since Saturday’s firestorm, but firefighters were still battling 31 active blazes across the state as of 11.00 a.m. Local time, authorities said.

The communities of Stanley, Bruarong, Dederang, Gundowring, Gundowring Upper, Kancoona, Kancoona South, Coral Bank, Glenn Creek and Running Creek continue to remain under threat, they said.

Residents of Taggerty, Acheron, Snobs Creek and Eildon were also on alert. Some fires would take weeks to contain, authorities said, and it could also take weeks to formally identify some of those killed.

Other teams were working to clear debris from towns gutted over the weekend to allow those lucky enough to escape a chance to return to their properties.

Among the survivors, families sat in dazed disbelief, surrounded by mattresses, dogs and whatever meagre possessions they managed to gather as they fled the fires.

Some talked of friends who had lost children, brothers and sisters, kids who have lost best friends and of a woman who has not seen her husband since Saturday. They said they had no warning before daylight turned to night and their communities were enveloped in a wall of fire and smoke.

Teams of disaster victim identification experts were flying in from all over Australia. Extra fire crews were being sent from interstate. Rudd offered army troops to help firefighters control the fires. (ANI)

Oz bushfire death toll rises to 107, 750 homes destroyed

Melbourne, Feb.9 (ANI): The death toll in Australia’s worst ever bushfires has risen to 107 and, authorities expect it to go up to at least 230.

Fires were still burning out of control and putting towns at risk in the Beechworth and Yackandandah regions in the state’s northeast, even as Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has accused arsonists in Victoria of committing mass murder.

According to The Herald Sun, state emergency officials claimed that some of the fires were deliberately lit, and added that they had also received reports of people returning to relight blazes after fire crews had left an area.

At least 750 homes have been destroyed and 3733 people have registered with the Red Cross after evacuating their properties. The number left homeless is expected to be far higher, the Red Cross said.

It was confirmed that at least four children have died, but that figure would also be expected to rise as full details emerged.

A two-year-old girl was among 13 in intensive care in hospital. Twenty-two people with shocking burns were admitted to the Alfred hospital, the state’s main trauma centre, where staff ran out of morphine trying to ease patients’ pain.

Most of the damage was done by two massive fires – one that virtually wiped out towns northeast of Melbourne, including Kinglake and Marysville with a 100km front – and a second inferno that raced across Gippsland.

TV veteran Brian Naylor and his wife Moiree were among the dead. The pair died when the fire at Kinglake swept through their property.

Six victims were in one car trying to outrun the inferno which swept through Kinglake in minutes. A resident said the town was littered with burnt-out cars and he believed many contained bodies.

Weather conditions have eased since Saturday’s firestorm, but firefighters were still battling 31 active blazes across the state as of 11.00 a.m. Local time, authorities said.

The communities of Stanley, Bruarong, Dederang, Gundowring, Gundowring Upper, Kancoona, Kancoona South, Coral Bank, Glenn Creek and Running Creek continue to remain under threat, they said.

Residents of Taggerty, Acheron, Snobs Creek and Eildon were also on alert. Some fires would take weeks to contain, authorities said, and it could also take weeks to formally identify some of those killed.

Other teams were working to clear debris from towns gutted over the weekend to allow those lucky enough to escape a chance to return to their properties.

Among the survivors, families sat in dazed disbelief, surrounded by mattresses, dogs and whatever meagre possessions they managed to gather as they fled the fires.

Some talked of friends who had lost children, brothers and sisters, kids who have lost best friends and of a woman who has not seen her husband since Saturday. They said they had no warning before daylight turned to night and their communities were enveloped in a wall of fire and smoke.

Teams of disaster victim identification experts were flying in from all over Australia. Extra fire crews were being sent from interstate. Rudd offered army troops to help firefighters control the fires.

He and state Premier John Brumby have also opened up 10 million dollars in emergency funding to deal with the crisis. (ANI)