Australia fires: what's next for towns devastated by wildfires?

Like many Australian communities, the town of Cobargo faces a serious challenge: coming together and rebuilding after the bushfires

Alkis Konstantinidis
Saturday 25 January 2020 12:41 GMT
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For two weeks, builder Rod Dunn has been living at a showground in a borrowed caravan, wearing an old coat donated by a friend.

His house, car, sheds and work tools were wiped out by the ferocious new year bushfires that swept through the Australian town of Cobargo, killing three of its residents and destroying dozens of homes, farms and vehicles.

Though he has lost everything, he counts himself lucky.

“We live in the best place in the world,” he says, nodding his head with certainty. “This has united people like you’d never have imagined.”

Standing outside a shabby caravan with plastic chairs and dogs roaming around, Dunn recalls how a friend risked his life to rescue him from his blazing property, and how strangers from a town 43 miles away gave him and his wife a tent to sleep in.

Rod Dunn stands outside the borrowed caravan he is now living in with his wife

“That tent saved us,” says Dunn, a 62-year-old with an unkempt white beard that reaches his chest. “I’m totally overwhelmed by what we’ve seen here, the generosity of mankind.”

Wildfires on a massive scale have killed 29 people since September in Australia, fuelled by record temperatures and tinder-dry conditions, turning swathes of farms and woodlands black, and blanketing the sky in haze.

While residents of many of the fire-threatened towns and villages heeded advice to leave and head to evacuation centres elsewhere, Cobargo’s less than 1,000 people chose not to abandon their town.

A handful of fleeing locals set up their caravans and tents at Cobargo’s showground, defying orders by police to move to designated locations outside the town in New South Wales state.

Word quickly spread that a commune was forming. Caravans in tow, more evacuees arrived, among them farmers, some bringing horses.

A firefighter’s suit hangs on the fence of a property

A kitchen, laundry facilities and a food bank were set up, and medics, a counsellor and a chaplain joined to support the displaced. Meetings were nightly and trucks rolled up daily, bringing water, food, animal feeds and huge hay bales for farms.

“We made the call that we stay as a community,” says Tony Allen, a former mayor in the district. “We knew then that was a big risk, it’s breaking every rule in the book, but this is the way to do this. We keep the community together.”

In Cobargo, a town known for its bookstores, century-old buildings and its annual folk festival, shops opened to accept donated goods, putting up signs that say “open to everyone” and offering clothes, linen, blankets and “free hugs”.

Australia's wildfire smoke reaches as far as Argentina

A set of amber-coloured firefighter overalls hang on the fence of one house, with a sign saying “Thanks guys”.

Volunteers from elsewhere in Australia helped to clean solar panels, repair farmers’ fences and clear debris from rural roads.

“There has been so much help and support. Everybody looks after each other. There are so many good people here,” says Philippe Ravanel, a Swiss blacksmith, standing in the rubble of a 150-year-old home that he bought in 2006, of which only the fireplace remains.

Community workers clean the solar panels on Peter Hisco’s house

Hundreds of people flock to a fundraiser at the local pub, the Cobargo Hotel, cheering and embracing firefighters as army personnel open their vehicles to children and former sports stars mingle with evacuees and farmers.

Homes are already becoming available. Peter Hisco is moving to Sydney, Australia’s largest city, and will rent his two-storey house to two displaced families. “My wife has a new job in Sydney so we’ll rent both floors out at a reasonable price,” he says.

Former butcher Barry Parkes, 68, who lost his house, two vehicles and his Harley Davidson motorcycle, says friends had asked him to house-sit for them. “We’ve had a lot of people offering us places,” he says.

Rod Dunn, the builder, says a friend had kindly offered him use of his property, rent-free for a year.

“It’s a good place too,” he says, smiling. “I should know, I built the bloody place.”

Reporting by Martin Petty

© Reuters

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