Fires in Los Angeles | The winds calm down, Donald Trump should go there soon

(Los Angeles) A ​​lull in winds in Los Angeles this weekend brings some respite to firefighters who continue to battle the flames, but meteorologists expect the return of more powerful squalls starting Monday.


Posted at 5:39 p.m.

Paula RAMON

Agence -Presse

Winds are expected to strengthen from Monday to Wednesday, opening “a new period of critical risk” for fires, meteorologist Daniel Swain warned on Saturday, adding that it may not rain at all for the next six or seven days.

As thousands of firefighters continue to work day and night to control the devastating fires, President-elect Donald Trump said Saturday that he hopes to visit the scene after his inauguration on Monday, “probably at the end of the week.”

Democratic California Governor Gavin Newsom invited the Republican, who attacked him for his handling of the fires, to visit Los Angeles and see the damage.

PHOTO FREDERIC J. BROWN, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

The fires have destroyed more than 16,000 hectares, an area almost as large as the capital Washington.

Dozens of people are still missing and at least 27 have died from the fires in Altadena, north of Los Angeles, and in the upscale Pacific Palisades neighborhood in the city’s west.

They destroyed more than 16,000 hectares, an area almost as large as the capital Washington, and led to the evacuation of tens of thousands of people.

Mounted police officers and dog brigades (with dogs) inspected the disaster areas on Friday in search of victims, in charred buildings and even in certain steep areas.

PHOTO FREDERIC J. BROWN, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

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Joshua Davis, a San Francisco firefighter with the National Search and Rescue Response System, was deployed with Bosco, a black Labrador.

“I hope they call us soon to come back [chez nous] », Confided to AFP Winston Ekpo whose house survived the flames.

He would like to be able to “clear the smoke, perhaps buy air purifiers and check the attic”, specifies the father, who has been living in a shelter with his wife and children for ten days.

Clear the roads

Hundreds of trucks crisscross the roads of Altadena, the Pacific Palisades neighborhood and the Malibu coast to transport workers who have come to clear the roads, restore electricity and inspect water and gas leaks.

PHOTO FREDERIC J. BROWN, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Southern California Gas Company employees check to make sure gas lines are shut off in burned homes.

Federal authorities have launched an investigation to determine the causes of these fires, which are the subject of numerous theories.

But experts are already pointing out a few elements: two very rainy years gave rise to lush vegetation, which then dried out without precipitation for months and violent winds made the task of firefighters almost impossible.

The Santa Ana winds, which fanned the flames at breakneck speed, are a classic of Californian autumns and winters. But this time they reached an intensity not seen since 2011, according to meteorologists, with gusts blowing up to 160 km/h.

Alex Tardy of the US Weather Service (NWS) said that when you combine the latest Santa Ana winds with the upcoming one and conditions on the ground, “we’ve never seen this kind of fire risk and such dry vegetation in modern annals.”

This does not necessarily mean that there will be more fires, he explains, but if they do break out there will be “potentially a more explosive and rapid spread”.

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