Minggu, 13 Agustus 2023

Hawaii wildfires: Oprah Winfrey and her camera crew turned away from shelter for survivors - Sky News

Oprah Winfrey and her camera crew were turned away from a shelter for survivors of the Hawaii wildfires - as officials confirmed at least 93 people are now confirmed dead.

The TV personality, who has spent recent days helping with aid efforts during a visit to the state, was accompanied by a CBS News crew when she was denied entry to the War Memorial Complex in Wailuku.

Officials said that while they appreciated Oprah's work, "out of respect for those who have come to seek safety and shelter at emergency shelters, our policy remains that no media are given access".

The County of Maui later clarified that Oprah was welcomed into the facility after she instructed the camera crew to remain outside.

"We welcome Oprah to continue to uplift our community's spirit and give her aloha to victims of the tragic disaster," a Facebook post said. "Her visit inside of the shelter today was truly heartwarming."

She has been pictured this week on social media visiting at least one shelter, helping to hand out supplies and giving comfort to victims.

This is the deadliest wildfire that the US has seen in the past century - surpassing the 85 who died in California's Camp Fire in 2018.

Hawaii Governor Josh Green says it is the largest natural disaster the US state had ever faced.

Workers are using axes and dogs to search through charred remains of properties on Lahaina on the island of Maui.

Ruined homes are being marked with an orange X for an initial search and HR if human remains have been found.

Authorities are urging people with missing family members to give DNA samples to help authorities identify victims.

Emergency workers are searching through the ruins of Lahaina on the island of Maui
Image: Emergency workers are searching through the ruins of Lahaina

Maui police chief John Pelletier became emotional when he told reporters the fire had melted metal, making remains extremely hard to identify.

"We know we've got to go quick [to identify victims] but we've got to do it right," he said.

He also conceded the number of victims would inevitably rise again as "none of us really know the size of it yet".

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All victims are 'Jane and John Does'

Lahaina was worst hit by Tuesday's fires and now resembles a war zone, with more than 1,000 buildings burned to the ground.

Survivors have spoken about how quick the blaze spread - the situation made worse by high winds and parched ground - and say emergency sirens failed to give any warning.

The five deadliest wildfires in US history

1871: Peshtigo, Wisconsin - 1,152

1918: Cloquet, Minnesota - 453

1894: Hinckley, Minnesota - 418

1881: Thumb, Michigan - 282

2023: Maui, Hawaii - 93 (final toll yet to be confirmed)

Source: National Fire Protection Association

Mobile phone alerts were also hampered by power and signal outages.

Some people were forced to jump in the sea and wait for rescue as cars exploded around them and escape routes were blocked.

It will cost billions to rebuild the town
Image: It will cost billions to rebuild the resort town

Geoff Bogar described how he and his friend, Franklin Trejos, had tried to help others before being forced to flee in their own cars as the flames approached.

His friend was unable to escape.

Mr Bogar said he found his remains on the back seat of his car the next day - lying on top of his golden retriever that he was trying to protect.

"God took a really good man," he said.

Read more:
'Everything we know is gone' - on the ground in devastated town

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Lahaina neighbourhoods burned to the ground

Residents have been warned that Lahaina is a "hazardous area" and there could be dangerous fumes and contaminated water.

The town is a no-go zone for the time being, with many people whose properties have been destroyed taking refuge in shelters.

At least two other fires are still burning on Maui but no fatalities have been reported so far.

More than 150 died in a tsunami in Hawaii in 1946, but this week's disaster could surpass that given authorities' grim prediction of more bodies.

In terms of the worst US wildfires, hundreds were killed in Minnesota in 1918 when a fire tore through rural communities.

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2023-08-13 23:15:00Z
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Death toll in Hawaii fires: 93 fatalities as Maui residents return home and FEMA estimates rebuild cost at $6n - The Independent

Wildfire roars through Hawaii’s historic Lahaina

The death toll from the devastating wildfires in Maui, Hawaii has reached 93 as more evacuations are underway in the western area of Kaanapali.

Officials say teams including cadaver-sniffing dogs have only covered 3 per cent of a search area and governor Josh Green has warned the death toll is likely to rise as those search operations continue to find more bodies.

The latest in a string of fires that have ravaged parts of the island triggered the evacuation of the community in Kaanapali on Friday night, the Maui Police Department announced on social media.

Officials believe the wildfires, which are now the country’s worst in terms of casualties in more than 100 years, could end up being the deadliest disaster in the state’s history. Earlier on Friday the authorities said 14,900 visitors left Maui by air the day before.

Many fire survivors said they did not hear any sirens or receive a warning giving them enough time to prepare, realising they were in danger only when they saw flames or heard explosions. Officials sent alerts to mobile phones, televisions and radio stations, but widespread power and cellular outages may have limited their reach.

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Where in Maui are the wildfires?

Oliver O'Connell13 August 2023 10:00
1691916312

Death toll from Hawaii wildfires reaches 93

The death toll from the devastating wildfires in Hawaii has reached 93.

Maui County announced the updated fatality figures for its island on Sunday morning.

Tara Cobham13 August 2023 09:45
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Jason Momoa issues stern warning to holidaymakers travelling to Maui

Jason Momoa has issued a stern message to holidaymakers hoping to still travel to Maui amid the fatal wildfires.

Two days after sharing his “heartbreak” about the wildfires that have devastated the Hawaiian island, Momoa shared a post stating: “Maui is not the place to have your vacation right now. DO NOT TRAVEL TO MAUI.”

Jacob Stolworthy reports.

Oliver O'Connell13 August 2023 09:00
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Stevie Nicks shares moving tribute to Hawaii town turned to ashes by wildfires

Fleetwood Mac singer Stevie Nicks has posted a lengthy tribute on Instagram to Lahaina, the Maui town worst-affected by the ongoing wildfires.

Nicks wrote that she owns a house on Maui a short distance from the town, and called Lahaina “the most magical place on earth”.

She captioned the tribute: “Lahaina is not gone ~ It is just away.”

Adam Withnall13 August 2023 08:15
1691910000

Hawaii newlyweds detail ‘heartbreaking’ escape from Maui wildfires

A newlywed couple who were married in Hawaii have detailed their “heartbreaking” escape from Maui wildfires. Cindy and Bob Curler hadn’t envisioned spending their wedding night sharing a sofa in a garage, but that’s what happened when they were unable to get back to their Lahaina hotel on Tuesday 8 August, as wildfires swallowed the town. Their driver was forced to take them to the site where he parks his limousine, with Cindy still in her strapless lace gown, and Bob in his crisp blue suit. “We’re more heartbroken to see what the town is like and what the locals are dealing with,” Cindy said after the experience. “Yes, it was our wedding day and night, but that’s only one night for us where these people are impacted for the rest of their lives.”

Oliver O'Connell13 August 2023 08:00
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Scale of wildfire scarring on charred Maui land captured in aerial footage

Drone video shows the devastating aftermath of wildfires that ravaged the island of Maui. Large patches of land in the area of Olinda were charred black and brown, while burnt trees remained standing as smoke loomed overhead. Maui County officials confirmed Friday afternoon (11 August) that the death toll from the Hawaii wildfires had increased to 67. The blazes are the state’s deadliest natural disaster in decades, surpassing a 1960 tsunami that killed 61 people. Fueled by a dry summer and strong winds from a passing hurricane, at least three wildfires erupted on Maui this week, racing through parched brush covering the island.

Oliver O'Connell13 August 2023 07:00
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Counting deaths and cost of wildfires ‘still in early stages’

Efforts to assess the full impact of the wildfires to Hawaii are still in their early stages, officials there warned on Saturday, even as the death toll rose to 89.

The fire that razed the historic Maui town of Lahaina is already the deadliest in the US for more than a century.

Crews with cadaver dogs have covered just 3 per cent of the search area, Maui Police Chief John Pelletier said. “We’ve got an area that we have to contain that is at least 5 square miles and it is full of our loved ones. And we’ve got 89 so far. Today we identified two,” noting that the death toll is likely to grow and “none of us really know the size of it yet.” He spoke as federal emergency workers picked through an ashen moonscape left by the fire. Teams marked the ruins of homes in Lahaina with a bright orange X for an initial search and HR when they found human remains.

<p>Wildfire damage is shown, Saturday, Aug. 12, 2023, in Lahaina, Hawaii</p>

Wildfire damage is shown, Saturday, Aug. 12, 2023, in Lahaina, Hawaii

Pelletier said that identifying the dead is extremely challenging because “we pick up the remains and they fall apart... When we find our family and our friends, the remains that we’re finding is through a fire that melted metal”. Dogs worked the rubble, and their occasional bark — used to alert their handlers to a possible corpse — echoed over the hot and colorless landscape. “It will certainly be the worst natural disaster that Hawaii ever faced,” Governor Josh Green remarked Saturday as he toured the devastation on historic Front Street.

“We can only wait and support those who are living. Our focus now is to reunite people when we can and get them housing and get them health care, and then turn to rebuilding.”

Adam Withnall13 August 2023 05:38
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Maui wildfires death toll rises as rebuild cost put at $6bn

Read the latest updates from Maui.

Oliver O'Connell13 August 2023 05:00
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Death toll hits 89, making it the deadliest wildfire for a century in US

The death toll from the Hawaii wildfires now stands at 89, governor Josh Green has said.

It makes it the deadliest wildfire in the US for more than 100 years, surpassing the toll of the 2018 Camp Fire in northern California, which left 85 dead.

A century earlier, the 1918 Cloquet Fire broke out in drought-stricken northern Minnesota and raced through a number of rural communities, destroying thousands of homes and killing hundreds. At least two other fires have been burning in Maui, with no fatalities reported thus far: in south Maui’s Kihei area and in the mountainous, inland communities known as Upcountry. A fourth broke out Friday evening in Kaanapali, a coastal community in West Maui north of Lahaina, but crews were able to extinguish it, authorities said.

Adam Withnall13 August 2023 03:43
1691892039

King and Queen ‘utterly horrified’ by Hawaii wildfires

The King has written a letter to US President Joe Biden saying he and the Queen were “utterly horrified” to hear about the “catastrophic” wildfires in Hawaii.

Read more...

Oliver O'Connell13 August 2023 03:00

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2023-08-13 09:00:00Z
2316296435

Sabtu, 12 Agustus 2023

Migrant boats in the Mediterranean: Why are so many people dying? - BBC

Four survivors in a metal boatSea-Watch/Karolina Sobel

In grainy photographs shot from a plane circling overhead, four people adrift in an iron boat in an expanse of the Mediterranean Sea wave their arms in distress.

It later emerges that the group - a 13-year-old boy, two men and a woman - are the only survivors of a shipwreck that they say killed the other 41 people they were travelling with.

The four survived by floating with inner tubes and lifejackets until they found another empty boat, likely from a previous migrant crossing, and clambered in. They spent several days drifting before being rescued.

A day after news of the tragedy emerged, migrants in the Tunisian city of Sfax prepared to make the same crossing.

One man, who had fled fighting in Sudan's western region of Darfur, told BBC Arabic that he planned to seek asylum in Tunisia, but was ready to board a boat if this didn't work. "I just survived a war, I have nothing to lose," he said. Another, from Kenya, dreamed of a better life for his family in Europe.

If they go ahead with the journeys, the two men will join thousands of others who have risked their lives this year on what has been dubbed the world's most dangerous migration route.

Experts told the BBC that badly designed and overcrowded boats, stormy weather, and gaps in international efforts were all factors in the danger - and one search-and-rescue NGO described the central Mediterranean as a "cemetery".

Stats show surge in deaths

It may feel like you are seeing more reports of shipwrecks this year in the central Mediterranean - and both crossings and deaths do appear to be on the rise.

European border agency Frontex says the central Mediterranean is the "most active route" into the European Union, with more than 89,000 detections reported by national authorities in the first seven months of 2023 - more than double last year, and the highest on record since 2017.

People making the journey set sail from the shores of North Africa, usually for Italy.

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) has recorded more than 1,800 migrant deaths in the central Mediterranean so far this year, compared to 1,400 for the whole of 2022.

number of migrants who died at sea since 2014

Among the migrant shipwrecks this year was an overcrowded fishing vessel off the coast of Greece, which killed hundreds in one of the worst humanitarian disasters in the Mediterranean in recent years.

The IOM says there is strong evidence that many shipwrecks are "invisible": unrecorded boats disappearing with no survivors, meaning the real death toll is likely to be much higher.

Why people make the dangerous journey

Those embarking on the perilous voyage come from around the world and have various reasons for wanting to reach Europe, from fleeing war or torture, to searching for jobs.

After being rescued from an overcrowded rubber raft this summer, one 16-year-old boy from The Gambia told the BBC he left home three years ago to "hustle hard and help my family".

He was aware of how dangerous the journey was, having lost an 18-year-old friend to the crossing. But he said this did not deter him - his friend had "lost his life for his family and his society and his nation".

This year, Tunisia has overtaken Libya as the main point of departure - amid a wave of racism against black Africans there.

map showing migrant routes from Tunisia and Libya to Italy

Some say the Libya crossing remains more dangerous, both for geographical and political reasons.

"In terms of fatalities, I think that the opening up of the Eastern Libya route (from territories controlled by Wagner-supported militias) is having a bigger impact," said Nando Sigona, a professor at the University of Birmingham and a migration expert.

"It is much longer and it also brings boats at the border between Italian and Greek national waters - two governments currently not too keen to be seen as providing rescue operations to migrants at sea," he said, pointing to the Greek shipwreck in June as an example.

Unseaworthy boats

Migrants are typically travelling on overcrowded and unseaworthy boats, with limited flotation devices should they capsize.

Types of boats include rubber rafts and fishing vessels - and on the Tunisian route, metal boats are common.

Migrants are pictured on a metal boat as Tunisian coastguards try to stop them at sea during their attempt to cross to Italy, off Sfax, Tunisia April 27, 2023
REUTERS/Jihed Abidellaoui

Frontex spokesperson Chris Borowski described them as "coffins in water".

"Combine this with the fact that usually there are dozens of these launched at one time with 40 or more people on board and you have a recipe for disaster," he said.

Mr Borowski said that "greedy people smugglers" used metal boats to offer "discount" crossings as they competed for migrants' business.

Peak season and storms

Crossings of the central Mediterranean are seasonal, with increased attempts in the summer. But weather can be unpredictable and successful journeys across the Mediterranean can take days.

"If storms occur or the seas are rough - which may become more frequent with climate change - there is a much greater risk to life," IOM spokesperson Ryan Schroeder said.

"Sometimes not even bad weather deters smugglers from sending people out to sea," he added, pointing to the boats that have recently capsized near the island of Lampedusa, which were launched despite rough seas.

And Mr Borowski says poor weather makes spotting boats in distress even more difficult.

"Imagine searching for a Vauxhall Corsa from the air in an area the size of the UK. Now try looking for a dozen or more in the open sea," he said. "This is the daunting challenge in the central Med. This combined with an unforgiving sea, especially when the weather turns bad, as we have seen in recent days."

'Willingly created a cemetery'

While Frontex offers "general oversight and technical support", Prof Sigona says national governments mostly govern search and rescue (SAR) operations in the central Mediterranean, with the work of NGO vessels closely regulated.

The IOM's Mr Schroeder said SAR efforts are no longer as "proactive, comprehensive or adequately resourced" as they were during the big Mare Nostrum rescue operation led by Italy in 2013 to 2014.

The boat under search lights
Greek Coast Guard

Under the current system, Mr Schroeder said the IOM was concerned that "SAR gaps, alleged delays in rescue and reported lack of response to distress calls may be contributing to tragedies on this route".

NGOs operating rescue vessels on the central Mediterranean were more critical. The route "has become so deadly because of a reckless policy of deterrence and neglect that European states have been pursuing for years", Wasil Schauseil, communications coordinator at SOS Humanity, said.

German NGO Sea-Watch said the EU had "willingly created a cemetery". It said there was a lack of SAR coordination and that "illegal pullbacks" were being conducted by the Libyan coastguard, which the EU has equipped and trained.

And last month, the EU signed a $118m (£90m) deal with Tunisia to try to reduce "irregular" migration.

A European Commission spokesperson defended working with the North African countries, saying the "still too high number of casualties" in the Mediterranean meant it was "important to continue strengthening the capacity of the Libyan coastal authorities to carry out effective search and rescue operations in line with international standards".

NGOs have also criticised a new law in Italy requiring their rescue vessels to head to often distant ports after an operation rather than continuing to patrol for more migrant boats in distress. They say this reduces their time in areas were shipwrecks are more common.

Italy says the aim is to spread arrivals across the country.

Critics of rescue NGOs say their presence encourages migrants to embark on the potentially fatal journey - the NGOs reject this.

Looking for solutions

Frontex's Mr Borowski acknowledged that "we can, and indeed, we must, do better" at stopping "tragedies at sea", calling for "shared solutions". IOM spokesperson Mr Schroeder said all efforts should "focus on saving lives and addressing the reasons that people are compelled to risk their lives".

The IOM and other UN agencies have called for coordinated European search-and-rescue operations in the central Mediterranean, and for safer legal pathways for migration and asylum to prevent deaths at sea.

The European Commission spokesperson said its efforts to enhance SAR coordination between its members were "extensive". It was working to deter smugglers and develop safe ways for people to come to the EU that would break "the business model of the smugglers and the traffickers".

They said shipwrecks, like the one this summer off the coast of Greece, are "yet another call to action" that highlighted "the urgency to intensify our work".

Additional reporting by Bassam Bounenni, BBC Arabic

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2023-08-13 01:45:55Z
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Investigation launched into claims record-breaking mountaineers climbed over dying porter on K2 - Sky News

An investigation has been launched into claims climbers left a porter to die near the peak of the world's most treacherous mountain, a mountaineer has said.

Dozens of climbers are alleged to have walked past the Pakistani helper in their eagerness to reach the summit of K2 after he was gravely injured in a fall.

The accusations surrounding the events on 27 July on the world's second-highest peak overshadowed a record-breaking climb by Norwegian mountaineer Kristin Harila and her Nepalese guide Tenjen (Lama) Sherpa. They became the fastest climbers to scale the world's 14 highest mountains, which took 92 days.

She has rejected any responsibility for the death of the porter, Mohammed Hassan, a 27-year-old father of three who slipped and fell off a narrow trail in a particularly dangerous area of the mountain known as the bottleneck.

A mountaineer attempts to help 27-year-old father-of-three Muhammad Hassan, a high porter who died on K2. Pic: ServusTV
Image: A mountaineer attempts to help Muhammad Hassan. Pic: ServusTV

She was defending herself against allegations made by two other climbers who were on K2 that day, Austrian Wilhelm Steindl and German Philip Flaemig, who had aborted their climb because of adverse weather conditions but said they reconstructed events later by reviewing drone footage.

The footage appeared to show dozens of climbers passing a gravely injured Mr Hassan instead of coming to his rescue.

Mr Steindl alleged the porter could have been saved if the other climbers, including Ms Harila and her team, had given up their attempt to reach the summit.

"There is a double standard here. If I or any other Westerner had been lying there, everything would have been done to save them," Mr Steindl told the Associated Press. "Everyone would have had to turn back to bring the injured person back down to the valley."

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Why was mountain porter left to die?

Harila says her team 'tried for hours' to save man

However, speaking to Sky News on Friday Ms Harila said her team "tried for hours to save" Mr Hassan - and one team member even took off his oxygen mask and gave it to him because he did not have his own.

She said Mr Hassan had been dangling from a rope upside down after his fall at the bottleneck, which she described as "probably the most dangerous part of K2".

She said after around an hour her team were able to bring Mr Hassan back onto the trail.

The group then decided to split, she said, with her and Lama continuing to the top of the mountain because her forward fixing team had run into their own difficulties.

Read more:
Body of climber missing since 1986 discovered on melting Swiss glacier
Sherpa guides rescue freezing climber from Everest 'death zone'

Norwegian mountaineer Kristin Harila, 37, along with Nepali mountaineer Tenjen (Lama) Sherpa, 35, pose for a picture upon their arrival at the airport after becoming the world&#39;s fastest climbers to scale all peaks above 8,000 meters in the shortest time, in Kathmandu, Nepal, August 5, 2023. REUTERS/Navesh Chitrakar
Image: Norwegian mountaineer Kristin Harila with Nepali mountaineer Tenjen (Lama) Sherpa

Porter apparently lacked equipment

Asked about Mr Hassan's gear, Ms Harila said he was not wearing a down suit and did not have gloves, nor did he have oxygen. "We didn't see any sign of either a mask or oxygen tank," she said.

After reaching the top, Ms Harila filmed an "emotional" video celebrating their record-breaking climb.

She said she only discovered Mr Hassan had died as she climbed down the mountain, and said she and her team were unable to recover his body because it was "impossible to safely carry him down".

K2, referred to as "killer mountain", is located in the Karakorum mountain range and is 8,611-metres (28,250-foot) high. Pic: Red Bull Content Pool/AP images
Image: K2, referred to as 'killer mountain', is located in the Karakorum mountain range. File pic: AP

Investigation launched into death

An investigation has been launched into Mr Hassan's death, according to Karrar Haidri, the secretary of the Pakistan Alpine Club, a sports organisation that also serves as the governing body for mountaineering in Pakistan.

Anwar Syed, the head of the company handling Ms Harila's expedition, Lela Peak Expedition, said Mr Hassan died about 150m below the summit.

He said several people tried to help by providing oxygen and warmth to no avail.

Mr Syed said because of the bottleneck's dangerous conditions it would not be possible to retrieve Mr Hassan's body and hand it to the family. He said his company had given money to Mr Hassan's family and would continue to help.

Asked about Mr Hassan's apparent lack of equipment, Mr Syed said the expedition company pays money to porters to buy gear and Mr Hassan was paid the agreed-upon amount.

German cameraman Philip Flaemig, who was on K2 when 27-year-old father-of-three Muhammad Hassan died.
Image: German cameraman Philip Flaemig

Claims Hassan had no high-altitude experience

Mr Flaemig, the second climber to make the allegations, claimed Mr Hassan had no high-altitude experience in an interview with Austrian newspaper Der Standard.

"He wasn't equipped properly. He did not have experience. He was a base camp porter and for the first time was picked to be a high-altitude porter. He wasn't qualified for this," he said.

Wilhelm Steindl with the family of 27-year-old father-of-three Muhammad Hassan, from Pakistan, a high porter who died on the K2 mountain during an expedition to the summit.
Image: Wilhelm Steindl with the family of Muhammad Hassan

Mr Steindl visited Mr Hassan's family and set up a crowdfunding campaign, with donations reaching more than €114,000 (£98,000) on Saturday.

"I saw the suffering of the family," Mr Steindl told AP. "The widow told me that her husband did all this so that his children would have a chance in life, so that they could go to school."

K2 is widely considered one of the hardest peaks in mountaineering and as of February 2021, some 377 people had summited the mountain while 91 died trying - a ratio of one death for every four successful climbs.

Experts say it is even more dangerous than Everest, the world's tallest peak, because less of the mountain flattens off and it is prone to avalanches and rock falls.

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2023-08-12 18:19:32Z
2320045806

Russia-Ukraine war live: Ukraine launches fresh missile attack on Kerch bridge - The Telegraph

Ukraine has targeted the Kerch Bridge in a rare daytime missile attack on the Crimean Peninsula that Moscow claims was shot down before causing any damage.

Videos circulating social media show two columns of smoke rising around the bridge. The Telegraph was not immediately able to verify whether the bridge had been damaged.

“Air defence forces shot down two enemy missiles over the Kerch Strait. The Crimean bridge was not damaged,” Sergei Aksyonov, the Russian-installed governor of the Crimean peninsula, posted on Telegram. Aksyonov’s adviser claimed that the billows of smoke were a “cover” created by rescue services.

Meanwhile, the Russian defence ministry said that Ukraine had tried to strike the bridge using S-200 anti-aircraft rockets.

The attack is believed to be the first time that the Kerch Bridge has been targeted in the daytime, and came just hours after the Russian defence ministry claimed that they had downed 20 drones targeting the occupied-Crimean peninsula early on Saturday.

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2023-08-12 09:47:03Z
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Hawaii wildfires death toll rises to 80 as more evacuations under way in Kaanapali - The Independent

Wildfire roars through Hawaii’s historic Lahaina

The death toll from the devastating wildfires in Maui, Hawaii has reached 80 as more evacuations are underway in the western area of Kaanapali.

The latest in a string of fires that have ravaged parts of the island triggered the evacuation of the community in Kaanapali on Friday night, the Maui Police Department announced on social media.

In a late evening statement on Friday, Maui County said that the death toll on the island had risen to 80, with officials believing the wildfires could end up being the deadliest disaster in the state’s history. Earlier that day, it said 14,900 visitors left Maui by air Thursday.

Cadaver-sniffing dogs were deployed to search for the dead, Maui County Mayor Richard Bissen Jr. said, with Gov. Josh Green previously warning the death toll would likely rise as search and rescue operations continue.

Many fire survivors said they did not hear any sirens or receive a warning giving them enough time to prepare, realising they were in danger only when they saw flames or heard explosions. Officials sent alerts to mobile phones, televisions and radio stations, but widespread power and cellular outages may have limited their reach.

1691831075

Death toll rises to 80 in Maui wildfires

The death toll has risen to 80 as a result of the wildfires that decimated parts of the island of Maui this past week, officials in Hawaii said Friday.

The number of confirmed fatalities in the 9 p.m. announcement by the County of Maui increased from the previous figure of 67.

Gov. Josh Green had previously warned the death toll would likely rise as search and rescue operations continue. Authorities set a curfew from 10 p.m. until 6 a.m. Saturday.

"The recovery's going to be extraordinarily complicated, but we do want people to get back to their homes and just do what they can to assess safely, because it's pretty dangerous," Green told Hawaii News Now.

Cadaver-sniffing dogs were deployed to search for the dead, Maui County Mayor Richard Bissen Jr. said.

Tara Cobham12 August 2023 10:04
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West Maui fire causes Friday night evacuation

Police say a new fire burning on the Hawaii island of Maui has triggered the evacuation of a community to the northeast of the area that burned earlier this week.

The fire prompted the evacuation of people in Kaanapali in West Maui on Friday night, the Maui Police Department announced on social media. No details of the evacuation were immediately provided.

Authorities in Hawaii are working to evacuate people from Maui as firefighters work to contain wildfires and put out flare-ups.

The County of Maui said early Friday that 14,900 visitors left Maui by air Thursday.

Airlines added additional flights to accommodate visitors leaving the island. The county advised visitors that they can book flights to Honolulu and continue on another flight to their destination.

The Hawaii Emergency Management Agency called on residents and visitors to suspend unnecessary travel to the island to make space for first responders and volunteers heading there to help residents. Visitors on nonessential travel were being asked to leave the island, according to the Hawai*i Tourism Authority.

<p>A man walks through wildfire wreckage in Lahaina, Hawaii</p>

A man walks through wildfire wreckage in Lahaina, Hawaii

Tara Cobham12 August 2023 08:30
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Governor of Hawaii and mayor of Maui visit remains of Lahaina

Ariana Baio12 August 2023 12:00
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Maui residents return to charred remains of historic town

Residents of Lahaina were allowed back home on Friday 11 August for the first time since wildfires killed at least 67 people and turned large swaths of the centuries-old town into a hellscape of ashen rubble.

The devastation was clear to see, with nearly every building flattened to debris on Front Street, the heart of the Maui community and the economic hub of the island.

Incinerated cars were seen crushed by downed telephone poles, while charred elevator shafts still stand as testaments to the burned-down apartment buildings they once served.

Pools could also be seen filled with charcoal-coloured water.

Oliver Browning reports:

Scenes of devastation as Maui residents return to charred remains of historic town

Residents of Lahaina were allowed back home on Friday 11 August for the first time since wildfires killed at least 67 people and turned large swaths of the centuries-old town into a hellscape of ashen rubble. The devastation was clear to see, with nearly every building flattened to debris on Front Street, the heart of the Maui community and the economic hub of the island. Incinerated cars were seen crushed by downed telephone poles, while charred elevator shafts still stand as testaments to the burned-down apartment buildings they once served. Pools could also be seen filled with charcoal-coloured water.

Tara Cobham12 August 2023 11:30
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Satellite mobile hotspots reach Maui to try to rebuild communications and find the missing amid wildfires

Portable mobile hotspots have arrived in Maui to restore Internet service and help victims of the devastating wildfire call for help.

At least 55 people were killed by the blaze and the death toll is expected to rise with around 1,000 people on the Hawaiian island still unaccounted for.

Hawaii Governor Josh Green told reporters on Thursday that with communication systems destroyed in the fires, many of those unaccounted for had been unable to confirm they were safe.

Graeme Massie reports:

Ariana Baio12 August 2023 11:00
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Jason Momoa issues stern warning to holidaymakers travelling to Maui

Jason Momoa has issued a stern message to holidaymakers hoping to still travel to Maui amid the fatal wildfires.

Two days after sharing his “heartbreak” about the wildfires that have devastated the Hawaiian island, Momoa shared a post stating: “Maui is not the place to have your vacation right now. DO NOT TRAVEL TO MAUI.”

He continued: “Do not convince yourself that your presence is needed on an island that is suffering this deeply.

“Mahalo to everyone who has donated and shown aloha to the community in this time of need.”

Jacob Stolworthy reports:

Tara Cobham12 August 2023 10:30
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Famous banyan tee in Lahaina is burned, but still standing

Ariana Baio12 August 2023 10:00
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Newlyweds married in Hawaii detail ‘heartbreaking’ escape from Maui wildfires

A newlywed couple who were married in Hawaii have detailed their “heartbreaking” escape from Maui wildfires.

Cindy and Bob Curler hadn’t envisioned spending their wedding night sharing a sofa in a garage, but that’s what happened when they were unable to get back to their Lahaina hotel on Tuesday 8 August, as wildfires swallowed the town.

Their driver was forced to take them to the site where he parks his limousine, with Cindy still in her strapless lace gown, and Bob in his crisp blue suit.

“We’re more heartbroken to see what the town is like and what the locals are dealing with,” Cindy said after the experience.

“Yes, it was our wedding day and night, but that’s only one night for us where these people are impacted for the rest of their lives.”

Oliver Browning reports:

Hawaii newlyweds detail ‘heartbreaking’ escape from Maui wildfires

A newlywed couple who were married in Hawaii have detailed their “heartbreaking” escape from Maui wildfires. Cindy and Bob Curler hadn’t envisioned spending their wedding night sharing a sofa in a garage, but that’s what happened when they were unable to get back to their Lahaina hotel on Tuesday 8 August, as wildfires swallowed the town. Their driver was forced to take them to the site where he parks his limousine, with Cindy still in her strapless lace gown, and Bob in his crisp blue suit. “We’re more heartbroken to see what the town is like and what the locals are dealing with,” Cindy said after the experience. “Yes, it was our wedding day and night, but that’s only one night for us where these people are impacted for the rest of their lives.”

Tara Cobham12 August 2023 09:42
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Man relives ‘screams of horror’ as he spent three hours in ocean trying to escape

Hawaii fires: Man relives 'screams of horror' as he spent three hours in ocean trying to escape
Ariana Baio12 August 2023 09:00
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ICYMI: ‘No indication’ warning sirens sounded before wildfires, report says

Residents in Maui claim they were not warned of the fast-moving wildfire that killed at least 55 people and displaced thousands of others this past week.

While officials say they sent out alerts, a new report from Associated Press indicates that the Hawaii Emergency Management records show “no indication that warning sirens sounded before people ran for their lives.”

Officials sent alerts to cell phones, televisions and radio stations – however, the area was experiencing “widespread” power and cellphone outages.

Ariana Baio12 August 2023 08:00

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2023-08-12 11:00:00Z
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Matildas keep World Cup dream alive with epic penalty shootout win over France - The Guardian

Even when the sun went down over balmy Brisbane the heat did not dissipate for a second as Australia and France fought for their spot in the semi-finals over more than three hours. Regulation time ended goalless, as did 30 minutes of extra-time, and a breathtaking penalty shootout was required to separate these two sides.

In her first Women’s World Cup, substitute Cortnee Vine stepped up as the host nation’s 10th penalty-taker, and became Australia’s hero as she sent the Matildas through to the semi-finals for the first time in the team’s history.

Three shootout saves from goalkeeper Mackenzie Arnold, despite smacking her own kick into the upright, set the tone for the denouement to a rollercoaster evening in Brisbane and earned her player of the match status.

The heart-stopping, historic victory came after a hard-fought game, with France quickly showcasing their sharp attacking prowess and sending shivers through the almost completely green and gold crowd. The hits came fast down the left flank as Sakina Karchaoui and Selma Bacha supplied Kadidiatou Diani and Eugenie Le Sommer in the centre.

The pace with which France stormed towards Australia’s defence in the opening minutes sent a nervous hush over the nearly 50,000-strong crowd. And there were signs of nervousness on the pitch too, which Diani took advantage of in the seventh minute when Matildas centre-back Alanna Kennedy’s attempted clearance went straight up in the air. As Diani pounced on the dropping ball Kennedy was already on the back foot and could do nothing but snatch at her shirt – for which she somehow avoided a booking. Diani’s shot across the face of goal went out past the far post but the defence looked rattled. It was an early hand-in-mouth moment that would be repeated for both sides throughout the increasingly tense and chaotic do-or-die game.

For much of the first half the green and gold crowd hummed along with occasional outbursts for long balls forward, footage of Sam Kerr on the bench, and any touch from Mary Fowler, who donned her black gloves despite the afternoon temperature reaching more than 20C.

As the light faded, the noise level in the stadium ratcheted up several notches, and so too did the energy on the pitch. It was Fowler who just before the end of the half was provided the clearest chance on an open goal, only for it to be deflected by Elisa De Almeida’s thigh.

It took just 10 minutes of the second half for Tony Gustavsson to play his Kerr card. The striker took to the pitch in place of Emily van Egmond to the loudest ovation of the night to that point.

Kerr’s first action was to catch her boot in the turf and stumble, but it was followed quickly by a blistering run with the ball to the edge of the area before a cut back to Hayley Raso who’s belter forced a flying save from Pauline Peyraud-Magnin. The energy had shifted in an instant, but still chances were not converted.

Still goalless with only 10 minutes left of regulation time, frustrations seemed to reach boiling point on the pitch and sideline. Tackles late, shirts tugged at, coaches fume from behind their white-dashed line.

With nearly 50,000 people on the edge of their seats, things took a strange turn in the first half of extra-time when French substitute Vicki Becho appeared to take the ball well over the baseline only for it to go unnoticed, much to the displeasure of the crowd behind the goal.

In a flash of gold shirts, the subsequent corner resulted in the ball finding the back of the net off Kennedy’s head, only for the referee to rule she was dragged down by Renard. The look on Kennedy’s face told the story of just how close Australia came to packing up their camp at that point.

Australia will now face either England or Columbia in the semi-final next week in Sydney.

More to follow.

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2023-08-12 10:18:00Z
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