쉐도잉 연습: Los Angeles wildfires leave dozens injured and at least two dead, say officials | BBC News - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

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Let's return straight away to the US.
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Two people are known to have died,
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and a thousand structures have been destroyed by the major wildfires that continue to burn out of control around Los Angeles.
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Let me show you some of the live pictures
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that were still coming in here to the BBC because tens of thousands of residents have evacuated from the Pacific Palisades area,
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the site of the largest blazes that we've had that has now consumed almost 5,000 acres.
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The fires are being fanned by strong gusting winds of up to 75 miles an hour.
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The authorities have described it as a tragedy for the city of Los Angeles and like something they've never seen before.
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Well, the state of emergency is in force with the fires spreading at speed,
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forcing people to abandon their homes and their vehicles as they try to escape.
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Well, we've had the latest from the fire authorities and the police chiefs in the last little while.
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Let me bring you right up to date
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because the fire chief Anthony Marioni gave us an update on the two biggest fires,
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starting with that major blaze in the Palisades.
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We have well over 5,000 acres that have burned and the fire is growing.
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We have no percentage of containment.
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We have an estimated 1,000 structures destroyed and also no reported fatalities
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and a high number of significant injuries to residents who did not evacuate
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in addition to first responders who are on the fire line.
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For the Eaton Fire, it is located in both the Angeles National Forest,
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the Altadena area of L.A.
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County, and Pasadena.
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L.A.
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County is in unified command with both the Angeles National Forest and the Pasadena Fire Department.
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We have over 2,000 acres burning at this time,
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and the fire continues to grow with 0% containment.
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We have over 500 personnel assigned,
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and unfortunately, we have two reported fatalities to civilians,
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unknown cause at this time,
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and we do have a number of significant injuries.
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We have over 100 structures destroyed,
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and the cause of the fire is unknown and under investigation.
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Lastly, the National Weather Service has predicted a continued red flag weather event with strong winds and low humidities,
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placing all residents of Los Angeles County in danger.
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To all of our viewers,
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please prioritize your safety as well as the well-being of those around you.
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As we come together to continue to get through this widespread disaster,
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Los Angeles County firefighters will remain on the front line until we reach full containment.
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Well, that news conference, it is still going on.
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And we're keeping an ear because so many different officials have been speaking.
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But this is what people there in Los Angeles are waking up to.
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And this is the areas where there are no fires.
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But you can see the huge plumes of black smoke.
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And the police chief
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and the fire chief saying high numbers of significant injuries to people who did not evacuate those key areas.
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They've also been saying that services are being stretched to their limits.
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The fire chief, Kristin Crowley,
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explained that the sheer number of factors that the fire service there are having to deal with.
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Have a listen.
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Now together these fires are stretching the capacity of emergency services to their maximum limits.
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The Los Angeles City Fire Department is battling these two major fires while also maintaining,
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I want to focus on this as well,
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9-1-1 services for the city's approximate four million residents.
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Now despite the severity of conditions our department remains fully committed to safeguarding lives
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and property let's get the very latest on the ground let's go to our correspondent emma vardy
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and emma just tell our viewers uh watching where you are and what is happening all around you
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we've been driving along the pacific coast highway the big coastal road that goes along the coast of LA.
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Pacific Palisades where one of the biggest fires has been raging is up the hillside behind us
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and we've been seeing the destruction of the coastline.
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We've seen power lines down, scorched hillsides.
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It's like a ghost town.
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This is usually a very busy road.
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People traveling up and down to spend the day at the beach,
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cars with surfboards on their roof but it couldn't look any more different today.
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Emergency services vehicles are the only ones we're seeing going up and down.
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Many of these buildings people have been evacuated from from it's just like a ghost town
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and you can probably see the air is
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so thick with smoke we can barely see a few meters in front of us
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and even with this a protective gear on it's stinging my eyes
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and you can smell and taste the smoke all around
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and there are still burning embers from the fire i don't know
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if you can see but there's still fire burning up on the hillside
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and just behind us but we're in a pretty safe location the ocean is just a few metres that way.
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We were hearing in the news conference that,
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and I'll quote it, a high number of significant injuries to people who did not evacuate the areas
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that they were told to leave.
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In terms of those evacuations,
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take me through what you've seen.
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Well, as you can imagine,
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tens of thousands of people were given these evacuation orders.
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As soon as we got into the evacuation zone,
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all our phones started beeping with that evacuation warning.
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So everybody presumably with phones would have got that alert as soon as you get anywhere near a danger zone.
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But look, California residents are used to wildfires.
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These happen and have been happening more and more frequently over the winter period when there are strong winds.
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People know it's a risk and there are always people who do decide to wait it out a little bit longer,
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sometimes because they're protecting pets sometimes
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because they feel they're not quite in the danger zone some people try to douse their houses down with water
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but we've heard from emergency services
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that there have been a high number of injuries this time from people who did not evacuate for various reasons
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but that has led to injuries although thousands
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and thousands of other people of course did leave
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and we saw those dramatic scenes yesterday of people at first leaving by car,
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then on foot and abandoning vehicles that then had to be bulldozed out of the way.
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But when you're in the thick of it like this,
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it is very difficult to tell where the fire is coming from and there's limited signal to get any messages.
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And we can see behind you the wind whipping up and
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that is one of the things that they are really battling with
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because these are winds once in a decade they've been describing them as.
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And I suppose what was most concerning in that news conference,
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despite all their efforts overnight,
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they say there is zero containment in terms of any of these major fires?
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Yeah, that's right.
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Zero containment.
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And usually when you watch wildfires at this time of year,
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you hear within a few hours or in a day or so that they've got it under some degree of control.
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But they're battling so many fires on so many fronts.
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The emergency services are really tested to their limits.
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And I've never felt winds as strong as this in all the time I've been The winds were howling last night.
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The palm trees were bending.
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You almost thought they were going to crash down around you.
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So you can only imagine what that does to a wildfire,
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literally fanning the flames, causing those flames to rage out of control.
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Now, it's been a really comparatively dry winter here in Los Angeles.
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Very little rain through November and December, which means the hillsides hillsides
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and of course this is a city that is surrounded by mountains surrounded by hills
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have just been really dried out it's like kindling up there
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when you go hiking underfoot incredibly dry
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and the risk of a tiny spark setting off a fire is ever present and that's what's happened
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we've been listening to that news conference different officials giving us an update about different areas
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and when you tot up the figures just the latest now the two dead
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that we knew about but that figure
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that is now on the screen Emma you won't see it
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but let me tell viewers 70,000 people now under evacuation orders across Los Angeles
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and the wider areas so that number has increased markedly in the last few minutes
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when you total it all up
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but tell me a little more about the amount of firefighters they have trying to battle this
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and and just how stretched they are and whether they need others to come from other areas?
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Well just on those evacuations you know we were driving from the Hollywood area down to the coast
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and as we were driving
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you know our producer and other friends were getting calls
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that their homes back where we'd come from were being evacuated
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so you know you're almost driving out of one area of danger into another
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and many people really don't know where to turn.
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Now there have been thousands of firefighters mobilised to try to deal with this.
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And of course, the emergency services are having to prioritise with five or so different fires raging in different places.
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It means they're stretched so much more to their limits.
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Normally, they'd be able to pour all their resources into one really bad fire.
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Here, they're having to make really critical decisions about who to send where.
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And of course, there are only certain limited moments that they're able to get help from the air and drop fire retardant,
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drop liquid onto the flames to help try and get those under control too.
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But, yeah, those words, zero containment,
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are pretty scary to hear after sort of 24 hours of this going on.
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It's really interesting, Emma, because of his shoulder behind you.
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We can see the wind whipping up.
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Even through the course of this interview,
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it is getting worse behind you, not better.
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In terms of other details,
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though, we were just hearing people being urged to conserve water.
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there are power lines that are down all sorts of consequences
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that people are having to deal with that's right I mean
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where we were in Hollywood last night we weren't in danger for the time being
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but we had no power or we had no internet internet connection
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so very difficult to communicate as a reporter
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but also to check in with your friends
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and other people who live closer to where the danger zones are up in the hills.
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And so communication is very difficult.
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Now, as I say, that emergency warning thing that's been setting our phones off clearly overrides all of that.
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So you can get these emergency alerts,
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but it does mean that there's a lot of confusion.
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People don't know where family members are or
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which centres people have gone to when they have been evacuated or what's become of their homes that they've left behind.
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So a lot of uncertainty just driving through the city.
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You know, we were driving towards the fire.
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A lot of people were driving away from it.
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It really felt like the apocalypse.
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It was the only word that I could use to describe it.
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The normal blue sky blacked out by smoke,
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the orange glows and different sides of the city.
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It was like a scene out of a Hollywood movie.
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And, you know, Hollywood superstars who acted these movies are the ones now kind of experiencing the nightmare.
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They've been having to leave their homes behind,
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just like the thousands of ordinary people being evacuated too.
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Well, Emma, listen, we will leave it there for now.
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But thanks so much for joining us here in our program
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and giving us such a graphic account in terms of what is actually happening on the ground.
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We're talking there about the evacuation orders, 70,000 now in total.
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Well, let's hear from one of those who've been forced to leave their home, Marika Erdly.
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She talked to me a little earlier.
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She's now staying with relatives in Santa Monica.
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And she explained what the last 24 hours have been like.
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really scary i mean um it started this uh yesterday at
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10 50 i was gonna head out for a um a meeting
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and a business meeting to talk about the solar project and energy audits and uh
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we look outside and that orange glow you were talking about was all across the ocean and it was
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it was frightening i looked out with my cousin of a cousin visiting from budapest we went out
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and saw um saw the view of this i live above
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the my home is above the getty villa museum in la it's between right between pacific palisades
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and malibu it's a a development on a plateau of about 500 homes
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and i you know you can see everything from up there
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and the orange glow i'm like what's going on
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and look to the left and there's this giant giant storm of um of plume of smoke and i mean I mean,
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it was obviously right there in the Palisades and very scary.
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And as we're standing there looking,
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my daughter calls me, who's home I'm at,
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that her daughter, who's a two-year-old,
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needed to be picked up at the preschool.
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So I had to immediately get in my car,
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go rush and pick her up.
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She was on Sunset and PCH there.
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Brought her home.
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And as soon as I brought her home,
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the evacuation orders came and we just piled the car up with,
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you know, whatever I could think of at the time and got my dog my cousin,
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the baby, and some valuables into the car and drove to Santa Monica.
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Well, just one of those 70,000 who've had to leave their homes.
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So interesting through the course of the program, talking to different people.
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They are all saying that they've never seen anything like this.
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Veterans of California, veterans of wildfires,
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but this for them feels very, very different.
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Let me show you the live pictures again
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that are still coming into us that some of the emergency response
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and we heard from officials those being stretched to the limit sealing with
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so many fires in so many different areas
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and still none of them under control and this is what it's leaving behind
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because those some of the damaged structures in one of the
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main areas a thousand structures destroyed we heard from the officials 5,000 acres destroyed so So those,
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the live pictures coming in,
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you can keep regular updates,
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the pictures, the accounts, what we're hearing from officials.
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It's there on the BBC's live page on the website.
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So head there for the very latest.
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Around the world and across the UK,
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you are watching BBC News.

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