Wildfires still plague southeast Australia amid summer heat

Twenty-five fires still out of control today out of 150 burning across Victoria state yesterday

Australian Country Fire Authority firefighters battle a fast moving grass fire  getting close to homes in the north Melbourne  suburb of Craigieburn in, Victoria, Australia, yesterday. Photograph: David Crosling/EPA
Australian Country Fire Authority firefighters battle a fast moving grass fire getting close to homes in the north Melbourne suburb of Craigieburn in, Victoria, Australia, yesterday. Photograph: David Crosling/EPA

Scores of wildfires raging across southeast Australia in dry and windy summer conditions have destroyed 20 homes and injured a firefighter.

Victoria state country fire authority chief officer Euan Ferguson said 20 homes had been destroyed in the state by blazes that peaked late yesterday. The toll could rise as damage continued to be assessed.

He said conditions had eased since late yesterday, when the state had faced its worst fire danger since 2009, when wildfires killed 173 people and destroyed more than 2,000 homes in Victoria in little more than a single day.

But country towns north of Melbourne, Australia’s second most populous city, continued to be under threat today, he said.

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Authority duty officer Brett Boatman said underground coal in the Latrobe Valley open cut mine had caught fire. That fire burned more intensely as firefighters dug the coal out to extinguish it, he said.

The authority said of the 150 wildfires that burned across the state yesterday, 25 continued to burn out of control today.

The only injury reported to date was a firefighter who received medical treatment after being hit by a falling tree yesterday.

In neighbouring New South Wales state, the rural fire service reported 50 fires burning yesterday, one temporarily closing the Hume Highway, which connects Melbourne with Sydney, Australia's largest city.

There were no immediate reports of homes lost in New South Wales, Australia’s most populous state.

Destructive wildfires are a common feature across much of Australia during the summer months.

AP