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Victoria fires LIVE updates: Two dead, grave fears for 28 missing as unprecedented fire danger looms

Simone Fox Koob and Mex Cooper
Updated ,first published

What we know so far

  • A state of disaster has been declared for six local government areas and the Alpine Resorts
  • Two people have been confirmed dead, and 28 are missing
  • Residents in fire-affected areas have been urged to get out while they can
  • 1000 people are being rescued from Mallacoota on a naval ship
  • Check Emergency Victoria for warnings and register with the Red Cross if you leave

That's all for today's blog

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We're going to be wrapping up our live blog of today's Victoria fires coverage now, but will be back in the morning.

The latest numbers from the State Control Centre confirm two people have died, while 28 are still unaccounted for in East Gippsland. 

  • About 50 fires are burning across Victoria
  • Almost 825,000 hectares have been burnt, 600,000 in the last week
  • More than 1000 firefighters are working across the state
  • 24 structures have been confirmed destroyed in Buchan, 19 in Sarsfield and 11 homes in Wairewa, but authorities expect to confirm further significant property and livestock losses when they can get into affected areas
  • Fire impact zone is 35,900 square kilometres with a population of 100,000 impacted
  • 66 aircrafts in use
  • 260,000 alert texts issued on Friday

In the meantime the latest information overnight can be found at the Vic Emergency website: https://www.emergency.vic.gov.au/respond/.

Latest evacuation warnings in place across Victoria

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Here are the nine current evacuation warnings in place in Victoria: 

  • Anglers Rest, Cobungra, Dinner Plain
  • Bruthen, Bumberrah, Mossiface, Ramrod Creek, Tambo Upper, Wiseleigh, Double Bridges
  • Buchan South
  • Dinner Plain, Falls Creek, Hotham Heights
  • Boggy Creek, Bullumwaal
  • Suggan Buggan, Wulgulmerang, Wulgulmerang East
  • Abbeyard, Bennies, Cheshunt, Cheshunt South, Dandongadale, Edi, Edi Upper, King Valley, Rose River, Whitfield, Whitlands, Greta South
  • Bendoc, Bonang, Cabanandra, Deddick Valley, Delegate River, Dellicknora, Haydens Bog, Roaring Camp, Tubbut
  • Freeburgh, Harrietville, Smoko, Wandiligong

Please remember information and conditions can change rapidly. The latest information can be found at http://emergency.vic.gov.au/respond/.

Bushfire victim slams Scott Morrison for walking away

By Janek Drevikovsky

A pregnant Cobargo woman who refused to shake Scott Morrison's hand on Thursday has said all she wanted was for the Prime Minister to discuss increased help for fire services.

But instead, Mr Morrison "turned his back", said Zoey McDermott, who lost everything she owns in Tuesday's fires.

Zoey McDermott refuses to shake the hand of the Prime Minister during his visit to Cobargo.Nine News

"He just wanted photos. He walked off on me," Ms McDermott told The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age.

"I would have had utmost respect for him, for any leader, if they had just sat down with us and discussed [what we needed]."

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Coal, nuclear energy and Australia's emissions targets

By Aimee Amiga

Europe correspondent Bevan Shields is talking to readers about the remarkable revelation that for the first time in history, renewables overtook fossil fuels as the main source of electricity generation in the UK.

Just 2 per cent of Britain's power now comes from coal. In Australia, it's more like three quarters.

What lessons can Australia can learn from Britain's decision to shut its dirty power plants? Is nuclear energy something Australia should explore as new technology develops? Are you satisfied with Australia’s emissions reduction targets and if not, what would you want the government to change?

You can join the conversation, or simply read what readers and Bevan are saying, in our Facebook group What's Got Melbourne Talking here

Air quality hits 'hazardous' levels in Melbourne's bayside as smoke blows across city

By Tate Papworth and Liam Mannix

Air quality in Melbourne's bayside suburbs hit 'hazardous' levels on Friday afternoon as smoke from bushfires across the state blanketed the city in thick smog. 

Smoke was blown across the CBD and suburbs from the East Gippsland fires, which also turned the air quality hazardous in the Latrobe Valley.

The MCG is barely visible.Jason South

The Environment Protection Authority's monitors showed Melbourne's air quality dropping to a 'poor' rating in the late morning and then falling to 'very poor' in the afternoon.

In Brighton the air quality had hit 'hazardous' levels as of 5pm on Friday.

First wave of Mallacoota evacuees board the HMAS Choules, bound for safety

By Tammy Mills

As about 1000 weary Mallacoota evacuees - and dozens of their pets - boarded the HMAS Choules for the journey to safety on Friday night, they were provided with a little comic relief.

One of the ship’s commanders, to put them at ease, greeted the displaced by telling them to think of the vast navy vessel as “a cruise ship without the pina coladas.”

The first group of evacuees from Mallacoota have been welcomed aboard the HMAS Choules. Justin McManus

And, Frankston doctor Andrew Taylor re-told, the commander said - tongue-in-cheek - that unfortunately the ship’s kitchen had run out of lobster, but the kitchen would be open all night for their new passengers.

The Smith family were part of the first wave of evacuees from Mallacoota. Justin McManus
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Community spirit serves up some good news in Bairnsdale

By Royce Millar

The Bairnsdale football ground seems an unlikely site for a display of Sikh culture and charity, as unlikely as hardy Gippslanders queuing for free vegetarian food.

But these are exceptional times in Eastern Victoria.

Sikh volunteers hand out meals at the Bairnsdale relief centreJoe Armao

On December 30, as fire raged through the state’s far east, 10 members of Sikh Volunteers Australia packed a van with food and water and headed from their base in Devon Meadows, in Melbourne's south east, toward the smoke.

“We didn’t know where to go exactly,” said organiser Lakhwinder Singh 34.

Fears allayed at Lake Tyers after evacuation

By Liam Mannix

Fears were held about the small town of Lake Tyers and the local Aboriginal community, but luckily we have just been told they have all evacuated.

Suzie Squires is the CEO of the Lake Tyers Health and Children's Service. She spent Thursday driving around the community in her van ordering people to get out as soon as they could.

“The whole trust evacuated yesterday,” she said. “I had a few I had to lay it on the line for. I had to go around and tell community I wouldn’t be there to help them.”

Ms Squires said the township had lost running water and electricity. Emergency services had warned her the fires expected to burn through the region on Saturday could cut Lake Tyers off for weeks.

“And because it’s only one road in or out, we would not have been able to get a fire helicopter evacuation or boat evacuation.”

Great Alpine Road closure update

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The Great Alpine Road is now closed between Omeo and Tawonga Gap Road, near Bright, due to increased fire activity, according to the Department of Transport.

This is in addition to the closure between Bruthen and Doctors Flat. The Great Alpine Road remains open between Bairnsdale and Bruthen.

No one should be travelling to the bushfire affected areas, including East Gippsland, Upper Murray and the Alpine areas.

Drivers have been warned that conditions can change quickly, so check for real-time traffic conditions at traffic.vicroads.vic.gov.au. For updates on bushfires go to emergency.vic.gov.au

People leaving early, or who relocate from the fire area, are asked to register for the 'Register. Find. Reunite' service as soon as possible. Register. Find. Reunite. can be accessed at register.redcross.org.au

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'Something out of this world': Cudgewa couple say nothing left to burn

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Cudgewa graziers Colin and Michele Briggs have decided to stay put on their farm despite the mass evacuation of their region for a simple reason: there is nothing left for fire to burn.

Colin Briggs, who has been a CFA volunteer for more than 30 years, said Monday night’s firestorm had torn through the community of Cudgewa - on the Murray Valley Highway east of Wodonga - with an intensity he had never seen in a bushfire.

Fires approaching the Briggs' cattle farm in Cudgewa, near Corryong.Michele Briggs

“The fires we usually get, they back off at night and you can do something with them," he said.

“These fires the other night burned harder than I have ever seen fires burn in the daytime.

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