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Fires in California have already killed 26 people. The biggest teacher will take three weeks to master himself. Rescuers and health workers work in helical conditions.
A truck in the foreground when rescue workers search for relics in Paradise, California.
In the most ardent city of Paradise in northern California, the death rate is 23 people. Thousands of people are missing.
The fire named "Camp Fire" is very quickly shot down on Paradise. People panicked on foot. The city is almost completely burned. The spatial images of NASA show huge smoke clouds and chimneys.
AFP News Agency estimates that only two fires in the state have claimed more lives: the 1933 Griffith Park wildfires and the Oakland "Tunnel Four" firewood in 1991.
Strong winds keep the fire going. On Sunday again, it was estimated that three quarters were out of control. Getting full control will take about three weeks, according to Cal Fire, of the California Forest Fire Department.
Rescuers spent the weekend picking up the dead – more whole bodies in baggage bags, charred body parts in buckets.
On Holly Hills Mobile Estate, mobile homes have been turned into pirated scooters. Yellow peas with marks such as "Doe C" and "Doe D" indicate where the bodies have just been found, reports AFP.
The hospital staff of Paradise has been able to save patients and themselves. When Nurse Nichole Jolly was evacuated from the Adventist Health Feather River Hospital, the trees in the parking lot were on fire.
While the "Camp Fire" fox was filling the car, the three-year-old girl called what she thought was her last call to the husband.
– I said I think I'm going to die here. Tell the kids that I love them, I can not take them home.
"Camp Fire" destroyed 6,700 homes and other buildings in paradise. One could say that the city is burned off the map. Up to now, 45,000 hectares have burned.
Further south, California lights more fires. In the night to Sunday, the fire "Woolsey" doubled.
In the exclusive resort of Malibu, which has 13,000 inhabitants, everyone was ordered to leave their homes on Friday. Two people were found dead in a vehicle in a private driveway.
Authorities have called more than 250,000 people in the state not to ignore the warnings, but to leave their homes immediately.
But police report that farmers are defying the fire and returning to their farms to take care of livestock.
Sweden's Angelica Apodaca lives two kilometers from the evacuation border in Thousand Oaks, northwest of Los Angeles, with her family. The windows are closed, but a smell of smoke emerges. The school is closed, the shops too.
"The kids are getting crazy while sitting in. Although many of the neighbors have already left here, it would not be easy to evacuate everyone," she told TT.
Mobile phones keep them fully charged and at your fingertips, SMS emergency services can be obtained with information. The car is packed in the yard if they need to get rid quickly. Titles, pictures, paintings, spare clothes, couple of dogs.
"I have a lot of friends who have already had to leave their homes, so I know what is needed.
Fire in California
California has suffered severe forest fires in recent years.
In August 2018, hundreds of fires broke out in that state. Two of them collapsed and caused the fire called Mendocino Complex. It was the largest landfill in California's famous history, 185,000 hectares. The fire was declared in July and fire departments failed to control the fire by the end of September.
The record for the biggest fire in California was then less than a year – the so-called Thomas Fire late 2017 has invaded more than 114,000 hectares.
The third fire in the history of the state was one of the deadliest. A cedar fire in 2003 burned more than 110,000 hectares. 15 people died – 14 civilians and a firefighter.
By comparison, the large forest fires in Sweden covered the summer of 2018 and represent the largest area of about 25,000 hectares.
Only two fires in the state have claimed more casualties than the current Camp Four. At least 29 people died in the wood fires at Griffith Park in 1933 and Oakland's "Tunnel Four" firewood in 1991 claimed the lives of 25 people.
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