Over 3000 residents and tourists have fled a Pacific island near
Los Angeles while firefighters from the mainland began to battle
the second major wildfire in Southern California this week,
officials said Friday.
The fire in Santa Catalina Island, about 50 km south of Los
Angeles, was reported about 12:30 p.m. Thursday, before the launch
of an armada carrying firefighters and thousands of pounds of
equipment from the mainland.
The cause of the fire has not been determined.
The blaze, which has scorched more than 4,000 acres, was fought
on the ground overnight but air strikes with water-dropping
helicopters resumed after daybreak, according to Los Angeles County
Fire Department Inspector Ron Haralson.
One firefighter was hospitalized for heat exhaustion Thursday,
but there were no reports of injuries among residents and
tourists.
It had destroyed one large commercial storage building, multiple
outbuildings and one single-family home in the island as of
Thursday night, officials said.
Fire officials expected about 500 firefighting personnel to be
on hand Friday, along with 10 helicopters and five fixed-wing
aircraft.
About 3,300 people had been evacuated from the island, most of
them visitors, said fire dispatch supervisor Andre Gougis, adding
that around 1,700 people remained, excluding firefighters.
Among the evacuees were some 45 children from Arizona who
traveled to the Southern California island on a science-related
trip.
The Catalina Island blaze was the second large fire in Southern
California this week as the region is experiencing the driest year
on record. A two-day fire in Los Angeles' Griffith Park earlier
destroyed about a quarter of the 4,212-acre hilly urban refuge
before being brought under control Wednesday night.
(Xinhua News Agency May 12, 2007)