United States – Two people still missing after the Colorado fires

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Fires hit the U.S. state of Colorado on Thursday, destroying nearly a thousand homes in two cities near Denver.

The fire, unlike previous fires, affected suburbs and not just rural areas.

Getty Images via AFP

Two people are still missing and one was found alive following fires that destroyed nearly 1,000 homes Thursday in the U.S. state of Colorado, authorities said on Sunday.

Of the three missing, “one of those people was found alive and well,” Boulder County Sheriff Joe Pelle told reporters, adding that searches were still underway to locate the other two. .

At least 991 homes were destroyed by the blazes that ravaged entire neighborhoods of Superior and Louisville, two towns bordering Denver, the state’s largest city, on Thursday, forcing tens of thousands of people to flee in an emergency.

Ongoing investigation

Snowfall halted the spread of the fire on Friday, but also complicated the search for missing people. “It’s a very difficult search because of the debris, the heat, the snow,” said Joe Pelle. The fire, called “Marshall”, broke out in the arid climate of this western state of the United States, fueled by wind gusts of more than 160 km / h Thursday.

The damage is startling: in aerial images, entire streets are little more than piles of smoking ash. The fire, unlike previous fires, affected suburbs and not just rural areas.

In the fire zone, around 1,000 homes were still without power on Sunday, according to Alice Jackson of Xcel Energy, and more than 11,000 were without gas. An investigation is underway to determine the causes of the fire, and a search warrant was announced on Saturday.

Colorado has been hit for several years by exceptional drought, like much of the American West. In recent years, this part of the United States has experienced unprecedented fires, especially in California and Oregon. With global warming, the intensity and frequency of drought and heatwave episodes are likely to increase further, continuing to create ideal conditions for forest or bush fires.

(AFP)

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