CANBERRA, Australia -- A fire swept into Australia's capital Saturday, destroying hundreds of homes and forcing thousands to flee. Two people were killed, police said.
Emergency services said early today that 388 homes were destroyed by the flames, Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio reported.
A mist of fine ash blew through the streets and the moon shone red through a thick pall of smoke hanging over the city late Saturday. Weaker winds allowed hundreds of firefighters to tackle three major blazes raging around Canberra's edge.
"At this stage we are still looking at fairly benign conditions," fire service spokesman John Winter said.
"We are now beginning to set strategies for the rest of the day. Hopefully as long as these winds stay down we'll be able to start to do some backburning work but that is ... going to only be secondary to continuing to try to protect property as the fires begin to move."
State of emergency
A state of emergency was declared in the Australian Capital Territory on Saturday as temperatures soared and powerful westerly winds fanned blazes into suburbs on the north, south and western edges of Canberra.
"This is undoubtedly the worst crisis that Canberra has faced in its history," George Browning, the Anglican bishop of Canberra and Goulbourn, said after visiting parishes early today.
More than 20 percent of the city was without power this morning and embers continued falling on houses, triggering fears more homes would be destroyed.
Helicopters clattered over the remains of houses reduced to tangles of charred timber and bricks surrounded by scorched, black lawns. On the city's edge, emergency workers plowed up vast tracts of land in an effort to halt the fire's spread.
Jason Walker's suburban Lyons home survived, but his neighbors both lost their homes. The fire consumed his garage and burned up to his back door.
"I'm like the pawn in the middle," he told ABC radio. "I do not know how I survived."
A city of 320,000, Canberra is set amid rolling hills and forests about 220 miles south of Sydney. Saturday's blazes were the most devastating ever to hit the city.
An Australian Federal Police spokeswoman said on condition of anonymity that one man was believed to have died of smoke inhalation while trying to protect his house in the Canberra suburb of Duffy, where up to 40 homes were destroyed.
Early today, police said an 83-year-old woman in an outlying suburb also was killed.
"It is a day of enormous sadness that we have lost a resident to the fire," said the territory's chief minister, John Stanhope. "A number of Canberrans have been seriously injured, perhaps up to 100 families have lost their homes.
"What we experienced today is a once in 100 years or 200 years experience."
A Canberra Hospital spokesman said more than 50 people were treated for smoke inhalation and burns. Two women with serious burns were flown to Sydney for treatment.
"It's a serious situation," fire service chief Phil Koperberg said. "We don't have all the resources ... to deal with the totality of the problem."
Indeed, many residents reported no firefighters in their streets. They battled flames using garden hoses and buckets filled from swimming pools.
Koperberg urged residents not to panic.
"It is critical that people do remain calm and recognize that often the house is the safest place to be," he said.
One official said some of the fires could have been started deliberately although most were started a week ago by lightning strikes in a nearby national park.
Thousands of people took shelter in three evacuation centers.
"We have got 1,500 to 2,000 here," said Frank Duggan, who was running one of the centers. "We have counselors, we have support staff running around trying to help people. In a situation like this it is all hands to the deck."
Bronwyn Lowe said she left her home to protect horses at an equestrian center as flames bore down on them.
"We managed to save the center but we have lost our house, we have lost our car ... we have lost everything," she told ABC radio.
Peter Lucas-Smith, who was controlling fire crews around Canberra, said there was little his forces could do to battle the blazes in treacherous conditions.
"Fortunately they don't come around very often and you've really got to fall back and look at property protection, and the safety and welfare of your people and the community," he said.
Thousands of firefighters and troops across southeastern Australia were battling fires.
The Snowy Mountains, about 280 miles southwest of Australia's largest city, Sydney, were hard hit, as about 1,000 tourists were evacuated overnight from the Thredbo ski resort. Hundreds more people were evacuated from area villages.
Australia is in the grip of a yearlong drought that has left much of the countryside parched and vulnerable to fire. Once fires start, they roar through dry undergrowth and into oil-filled eucalyptus trees, creating infernos that are all but impossible to put out.
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