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Mansions and mobile homes in ashes
VIDEO: Winds calm, aiding California fire fight
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GUS RUELAS/AP
Sharon Brand, 53, and her husband Marty, 49, look on as a wildfire threatens their Orange County home in Yorba Linda, Calif., Nov. 15, 2008.
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FIRE FIGURES

1,000+
Number of houses, apartments and mobile homes destroyed

50,000
Residents forced to evacuate

8,000
Size of the fires in hectares

3,700
Firefighters battling the fires

Choking smoke blocks out sun, thousands forced to flee as Los Angeles area turned into a `war zone'
Nov 17, 2008 04:30 AM


REUTERS NEWS AGENCY

LOS ANGELES–Wildfires hopscotched around Southern California yesterday although calmer winds slowed flames that have destroyed almost 1,000 houses, forced tens of thousands to evacuate and turned some neighbourhoods into scenes resembling war zones.

A pall of towering, choking smoke blocked out the sun in much of the Los Angeles area and in Orange County to the southeast after flames ripped through tinder-dry brush. The fires jumped freeways and reduced mobile homes, multimillion-dollar mansions and apart-ment blocks to ashes in about a dozen communities.

"I'm just seeing a lot of burnt fields, smoke, burned-down houses," said Nicole Gephardt as she looked out toward the Orange County area of Yorba Linda.

"This is crazy, knowing this is my community and it looks like a war zone."

Officials said wildfires have scorched more than 7,000 hectares over the past four days in foothills north of Los Angeles, in Orange County canyons and in the hilly celebrity enclave of Montecito near Santa Barbara. The fires broke out there Thursday and incinerated 210 homes before being brought under control.

The causes of the fires were not known.

Hot, gusting winds eased yesterday, allowing firefighters to create fire breaks with bulldozers and make better use of water-dropping aircraft.

Evacuation orders were lifted for more than half the estimated 50,000 people who fled their homes, but new fires threatened more than 3,500 houses. Fire officials said it would take days to extinguish all the blazes.

"This has been a very tough few days for the people of Southern California. We had the perfect storm – high winds, high temperatures and it is very, very dry," California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger told a news conference.

In a Los Angeles mobile home park in Sylmar, where fire devastated 500 trailers overnight, police using nine cadaver dogs began a search for bodies of elderly residents who authorities fear may not have been able to get out in time.

"Fire raged through that park so quickly there was no way of stopping it. It was like matches," Schwarzenegger said.

Police said they had reports of missing persons but had accounted for only 134 residents.

"At this point, no human remains have been found," said Los Angeles Deputy Police Chief Michael Moore. "At this point, we have no missing persons and no evidence of loss of life."

In Orange County, Janet Cunningham, 91, said she was given five minutes to leave her Yorba Linda home at dawn.

"I was so nervous. Five minutes is so little time. I didn't think. I didn't know which way to turn first. I just had eye surgery on Thursday and I'm not supposed to drive," she said.

"(The police officer) said I'd have to drive myself out. I don't know how I didn't have a heart attack," said Cunningham, who went to a rescue centre but believed her home of 38 years was safe.

"I just hope and pray it will be any minute and everything will be okay and I can go home," she said tearfully.

California's fire season, traditionally June to October, has been a year-round menace for several years because of perennial drought.

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