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Tuesday, January 14, 2025

Los Angeles wildfire death toll hits 24

No fewer than 24 people have died as major wildfires continue to ravage the Los Angeles area in the U.S. state of California, the city’s medical examiner said on Sunday, January 12, 2025.

California wildfires
California wildfires

The medical examiner said that 16 of the fatalities are related to the Eaton Fire near Pasadena, and eight others to the Palisades Fire in the Pacific Palisades district.

There have been several major fires in the region since Tuesday, but these two are the most severe.

According to the officials, the death toll may continue to rise, since it may take days before emergency services can safely access all areas impacted by the fires.

Firefighters were preparing for gusts to pick up again in the coming days, exacerbating what officials said could be one of the worst natural disasters in U.S. history.

The U.S. weather service forecast wind speeds of up to 110 kilometres per hour for Sunday, which combined with dry vegetation, favours the rapid and unpredictable spread of both existing and new fires.

The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire) warned of critical fire weather through to Wednesday.

“Life-threatening winds and dangerously low humidity are forecast for much of Southern California from Ventura to San Diego creating a significant risk of rapid fire spread,’’ the department wrote on X.

It warned the wind would increase fire activity and urged people to avoid mowing their lawns and parking their vehicles on dry grass and to ensure all campfires were extinguished.

According to Cal Fire officials, some 12,300 buildings have been destroyed or damaged.

Since Tuesday, almost 163 square kilometres of land have gone up in flames, a space almost the size of Washington D.C.

California Governor, Gavin Newsom, speaking to broadcaster NBC, said the wildfires would be the worst natural disaster in U.S. history, in terms of the scale and scope, as well as the costs it has caused.

Newsom went on to sign an executive order to temporarily suspend environmental regulations for destroyed homes and businesses.

“Just issued an Executive Order that will allow victims of the SoCal fires to not get caught up in bureaucratic red tape and quickly rebuild their homes,’’ he wrote on X.

According to a preliminary estimate by the private U.S. weather service AccuWeather, the fires have caused more damages of more than 135 billion dollars.

Arnold Schwarzenegger was among the Hollywood actors living in and around areas impacted by the fires.

“Don’t worry about me, or my animals, and certainly not my house,’’ the film star and former governor of California said, asking fans to think instead of the heroic firefighters.

As the fires rage on, attention has increasingly turned to the people fighting them.

Among the fire fighters are several hundred prisoners being paid a maximum of $10 a day for gruelling work trying to contain the blaze.

Californian authorities said the prisoners had undergone several days of training and are working voluntarily on removing flammable material and creating so-called firebreaks, or gaps in vegetation to stop the spread of fire.

They were given another $1 per hour for emergency work.

Each day spent working as a rescue worker shortens the prison sentence by two days.

Only inmates who are serving a prison sentence of a maximum of eight years and are not serving time for crimes such as rape or arson are deployed as helpers.

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