The L.A. wildfires have been spreading for five days, showing little signs of calming down.
Tensions are rising again as forest fires on the beach turn and spread inland.
The somewhat subdued wind is gaining momentum again, making evolution more difficult.
Connect with a reporter to find out more about the news.
Reporter Park Young-jin, please tell us.
[Reporter]
Authorities in California and Los Angeles County said four wildfires in Los Angeles County were still underway as of 10 a.m. local time on the 11th.The damaged area of
also increased, and about 156.3㎢, more than a quarter of Seoul's area, was burned down.
Thousands of firefighters have been deployed to fight wildfires, but the main wildfire containment rate is still around 10%, with 11% for Palisades wildfires and 15% for Eaton wildfires.
The problem is the wind.
The Korea Meteorological Administration predicts that the wind will strengthen again in the L.A. area by 2 p.m. on the 12th, with maximum wind speeds reaching 75-89 kilometers per hour, making it more difficult to extinguish wildfires.
Eleven people have been reported dead and 13 missing in the forest fire so far, and the number of casualties is expected to increase further if the search proceeds.
Evacuation orders have also been issued for residents of the Getty Museum of L.A. attraction and the nearby Buchon Bel Air as the Pelissades wildfire veered east and spread inland.
In addition, the University of UCLA has decided to conduct online classes until the 17th, and has also announced that employees should work remotely.
To the east of UCLA is the famous rich town of Beverly Hills, where residents cannot be relieved.
As of Saturday, 150,000 residents have been ordered to evacuate in L.A. County, and 166,000 have been issued an "evacuation warning" to be ready to evacuate at any time.
In addition, more than 12,300 buildings were destroyed in the fire.
[Anchor]
As the scale of damage continues to grow, there are growing criticisms of the authorities' initial response?
[Reporter]
The city and water authorities have been criticized by public opinion after it was revealed that 20% of the fire hydrants of firefighters did not have water during the Palisades fire suppression on the 7th.
California Governor Gavin Newsom also instructed the authorities to determine why L.A.'s 440-million-liter reservoir was closed and empty at the time of the fire and why some fire hydrants ran out of water.
In particular, a public war of words erupted when the LA Fire Commissioner criticized the city for raising the situation by cutting the budget for firefighting activities and neglecting water shortages.
As the battle spread, citing personal history of the fire chief and the mayor, the mayor of LA eventually issued a statement to ease tensions, saying, "First of all, extinguishing wildfires is the most important thing."
In addition, a nighttime curfew has been imposed as looting to rob vacant houses or stores is rampant at the fire-damaged site.
More than 400 defense forces have been deployed to areas affected by the Palisades and Eaton fires, and more than 20 people have been arrested so far on charges of theft and looting curfew violations.
I'm Park Youngjin of YTN in the international department.
Video editing: Lee Young-hoon
※ 'Your report becomes news'
[Kakao Talk] YTN Search and Add Channel
[Phone] 02-398-8585
[Mail] social@ytn.co.kr
[Copyright holder (c) YTN Unauthorized reproduction, redistribution and use of AI data prohibited]
International
More- SK sells 1.33% stake in Vietnam's Vienna Group for about 30 billion won
- A Korean student in his 20s who wielded a blunt weapon at a Japanese university, "Crime to solve this problem."
- L.A. Bureau of Water and Power "The depletion of fire hydrants is attributed to unprecedented water demand...There's no problem with the supply.
- AI Synthetic Photo Distributor Arrested in the rubble of Gangjin