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FIRE STORM
Weather aids firefighters battling blaze in Canada oil region
By Michel COMTE
Fort Mcmurray, Canada (AFP) May 9, 2016


Fort McMurray moms celebrate 'bittersweet' Mother's Day
Fort Mcmurray, Canada (AFP) May 8, 2016 - A big burly man jumps up from his seat at a Canadian fire evacuation center Sunday muttering a profanity, and rushes to a firefighter who is distributing flowers for Mother's Day.

He asks in a whisper if he might have a few daisies to give to his wife.

Several children also mob the firefighter, Laura Pereira, and ask the same.

She and her team took a short break from battling massive wildfires that forced the evacuation of 100,000 people from the oil city of Fort McMurray to hand out flowers they hastily picked up from a local florist.

"It's Mother's Day and they need to be honored no matter what," Pereira told AFP.

"I know today is a bittersweet Mother's Day for many Alberta moms, as you're away from your homes," Alberta Premier Rachel Notley said in a Twitter message.

"All of you are incredibly strong and I hope you're able to find a small moment for yourself today. My thoughts are with you," she said.

Events were planned at evacuation centers across the province to celebrate Mother's Day.

In Lac La Biche, about 300 kilometers (185 miles) south of Fort McMurray, small gestures such as the handing out of flowers and the serving of colorfully glazed cupcakes put ear-to-ear smiles on otherwise weary faces.

In the town's high school gymnasium-turned cafeteria for evacuees, Simonette Agarin helps her eight-year-old son Sean open the cap on a water bottle while his younger sibling devours a plate of pancakes, never looking up.

"This Mother's Day has been very different, very difficult because we're not home," Agarin said.

Sean said he had planned to give her a card but had to leave it at school during the rushed evacuation of Fort McMurray.

A volunteer overhears and tells him they'll dig up some craft materials so he and other children can make new cards. But Sean's attention has already shifted to another boy rolling a toy truck on the floor nearby.

- 'Worried about young families' -

At another table across the room, Darren and Colleen Todd try in earnest to get two-year-old Chase to eat his "yummy" bacon, while 11-month-old Taylor sucks on a piece of fruit.

"Life hasn't changed much from the regular day-to-day challenges of raising children back in Fort McMurray," Darren tells AFP with a chuckle, as Chase slips off his chair and crawls under the table.

"Chase just finished potty training, but now he's got diarrhea," he says with a long sigh.

"To him, this is just an adventure," Darren adds. The Todd family brought their camping trailer in the evacuation, which provides them a modicum of comfort and privacy.

Others have had to share relatively cramped quarters at the province's makeshift evacuation centers.

Christy Klima arrived in Lac La Biche late Saturday with a group that was escorted by police from north of Fort McMurray where they had been trapped since the fires erupted nearly a week ago.

Several moms in her group described a harrowing drive through the charred city, grateful that their children slept through the ordeal.

Others worried aloud that their children will have nightmares.

"I haven't been thinking about Mother's Day," Klima said, her shoulders crushed by the weight of losing her house in the fires and an uncertain future.

"I haven't heard from my two sons yet," she said. They are aged 20 and 21.

Her father was hospitalized with sudden, sharp chest pains Wednesday in the neighboring province of Saskatchewan where he lives.

"I thought I'd been doing pretty good until my meltdown yesterday," Klima confided, tightly gripping a yellow flower. "Everything just all hit me at once."

Despite her own serious woes, her mind wanders to the plight of others.

Authorities battling a forest fire in Canada looked to Mother Nature for more help Monday, as cooling temperatures and rain slowed the spread of the blaze that had forced the evacuation of an entire city.

There was more good news too, with the amount of land charred less than originally feared and the last of 25,000 people trapped north of Fort McMurray in Alberta province safely evacuated in road convoys through the ruined oil city.

Oil facilities have escaped major damage, officials said, and there have been no fatalities directly linked to the blaze.

Alberta premier Rachel Notley and other officials said the fires raging for days around Fort McMurray were moving "much, much more slowly" thanks to a bit of rain and cooler temperatures.

Authorities had worried the fire could spread east to Saskatchewan province, but Notley said that had not happened yet.

The fire's eastern edge was 40 kilometers (25 miles) from Saskatchewan and estimates of the area destroyed were lowered from 2,000 square kilometers (772 square miles) to about 1,600 square kilometers.

The ruthless blaze, fanned by high winds and fueled by tinder-dry conditions, devastated Fort McMurray and the region around it. The city was home to 100,000 until it was evacuated last week as flames burned homes to the ground amid scenes of panic and mass exodus.

Chad Morrison, senior wildfire manager for Alberta, said Sunday that favorable weather conditions and the hard work of about 500 firefighters had contained most fire lines in Fort McMurray.

The threat to oil-sand mines north of the city had also diminished, at least for now, he said.

Morrison said fire lines had moved away from the work sites of Nexen, a unit of the Chinese group CNOOC, after inflicting only minor damage.

Work sites of the Suncor petroleum group, which suspended operations in the area, had also been spared.

The company said Sunday it had moved 10,000 people including employees, their families and local residents to safety.

- 'The beast' -

Morrison said firefighters hoped rains and cooler temperatures predicted for Monday and winds from the west, gusting up to 60 kilometers per hour (35 mph), would keep the flames away from the petroleum work camps in coming days.

Even as fellow Canadians rally to provide succor and support, thousands of evacuees are coming to terms with the likelihood that they will be unable to see their homes anytime soon -- assuming the dwellings are still standing.

Hundreds of firefighters, exhausted and demoralized after days vainly battling a blaze they grimly refer to as "the beast," acknowledged that they will probably have to wait for the fire to burn itself out.

The Alberta oil sands are a vital part of the regional economy.

Huge swaths of forest and brush, as well as whole neighborhoods of the city, have been turned to ash in an area three-quarters the size of Luxembourg.

Firefighters are concentrating on saving vital infrastructure including telecommunications, electric grids, gas and water lines.

Rescue crews and police have been guarding the city, but it will be days before workers can begin clearing damaged or destroyed structures and residents can begin to move back into areas spared by the inferno.

Notley said late Saturday that gas lines had been cut, the electric grid damaged and a large part of the city had neither electricity nor drinkable water.

"There's a great deal of hazardous material to be cleaned up, and many other things to be done before the city is safe for families to go home," she said.

Most of the 100,000 evacuees have found temporary shelter with friends or family, but the government is working furiously to provide accommodations for the others.

- 'We're safe' -

In Lac La Biche, the first big town south of the forbidden zone, cases of mineral water, clothes and food provided by the Red Cross or donated by fellow Canadians are being distributed by volunteers.

"It's just amazing to see what's been done. We're overwhelmed, everybody's overwhelmed with how much the whole country has supported us," said Sarah, who evacuated with her family without knowing where they would end up.

"I've said to my daughter the whole way up here, the most important thing is that we're here, we're safe, and everything else is just stuff," she told AFP.

Notley said large numbers of evacuees could be housed for now in university dormitories in Edmonton or Calgary -- students left days ago when their spring term ended.

Across the province, more than 1,400 firefighters, about 133 helicopters, 200 pieces of heavy equipment and more than 27 air tankers are battling 43 separate blazes.

Reduced output by Alberta's oil producers -- down by a million barrels a day -- contributed to a rise in crude prices in trading Monday in Asia.


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Previous Report
FIRE STORM
Canada fire 'out of control,' may double in size
Fort Mcmurray, Canada (AFP) May 8, 2016
A ferocious wildfire wreaking havoc in Canada was expected to double in size Saturday, officials warned, cautioning that the situation in the parched Alberta oil sands region was "unpredictable and dangerous." "This remains a big, out of control, dangerous fire," Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale said of the raging inferno the size of London that forced the evacuation of the city of Fort ... read more


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