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Hawaii works to identify 99 confirmed dead as teams intensify search
Attendees embrace during a church service at King's Cathedral in Kahului on the island of Maui, Hawaii, Sunday, August 13, 2023. The church has been converted into an emergency shelter and destruction centre since the devastating wildfires that affected multiple regions on the island. (Photo: AP)
International News, News
August 16, 2023

Hawaii works to identify 99 confirmed dead as teams intensify search

HAWAII, United States (AP) – Hawaii officials worked painstakingly to identify the 99 people confirmed killed in wildfires that ravaged Maui, and expected to release the names even as teams intensified the search for more dead in neighbourhoods reduced to ash.

A week after a blaze tore through historic Lahaina, many who survived have started moving into hundreds of hotel rooms set aside for displaced locals while donations of food, ice, water and other essentials have poured in.

Crews using cadaver dogs have scoured about 25 per cent of the search area, the police chief said Monday. Governor Josh Green asked for patience and space to search properly as authorities became overwhelmed with requests to visit the burn area.

“For those people who have walked into Lahaina because they really wanted to see, know that they’re very likely walking on iwi,” he said at a news conference on Maui, using the Hawaiian word for “bones”.

Just three bodies have been identified so far and officials were expected to start releasing names on Tuesday, according to Maui Police Chief John Pelletier who renewed an appeal for families with missing relatives to provide DNA samples.

Green warned that scores more bodies could be found. The wildfires, some of which have not yet been fully contained, are already the deadliest in the US in more than a century. Their cause is under investigation.

When asked Tuesday morning by Hawaii News Now if children are among the missing, Green said, “tragically, yes … When the bodies are smaller, we know it’s a child.”

He added that some of the sites being searched “are too much to share or see from just a human perspective”.

Another complicating factor, Green said, is that stormy weather is forecast for the weekend, prompting discussions on how to handle high winds. Officials are mulling whether to “pre-emptively power down or not for a short period of time, because right now all of the infrastructure is weaker”.

The local power utility has already faced criticism for not shutting off power as strong winds buffeted a parched area under high risk for fire. It’s not clear whether the utility’s equipment played any role in igniting the flames.

Hawaiian Electric Co Inc President and CEO Shelee Kimura said many factors go into a decision to cut power, including the impact on people who rely on specialised medical equipment and concerns that shutting off power in the fire area would have knocked out water pumps.

Green has said the flames on Maui raced as fast as a mile (1.6 kilometres) every minute in one area, fuelled by dry grass and propelled by strong winds from a passing hurricane.

And he was conflicted about the anticipated storm.

“I want the rain, ironically, but that’s why we’re racing right now to do all the recovery that we can because winds or heavy rain in that disaster setting, which it’s showing right now, it will make it even harder to get the final determination of who we lost,” Green said.

Authorities have paused a system that had allowed Lahaina residents and others to visit devastated areas with police permits. Kevin Eliason said when he was turned away the line of cars waiting to get a permit was at least three miles (five kilometeres) long.

“It’s a joke,” Eliason said. “It’s just crazy. They didn’t expect, probably, tens of thousands of people to show up there.”

The blaze that swept into centuries-old Lahaina last week destroyed nearly every building in the town of 13,000. That fire has been 85 per cent contained, according to the county. Another blaze known as the Upcountry Fire has been 65 per cent contained.

Even where the fire has retreated, authorities have warned that toxic by-products may remain, including in drinking water, after the flames spewed poisonous fumes. That has left many unable to return home.

The Red Cross said 575 evacuees were spread across five shelters on Monday, including the War Memorial Gymnasium in Wailuku. Green said thousands of people will need housing for at least 36 weeks. He said Tuesday that some 450 hotel rooms and 1,000 Airbnb rentals were becoming available.

“We want to get everyone out of all of the shelters by week’s end,” he told Hawaii News Now.

More than 3,000 people have registered for federal assistance, according to the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), and that number was expected to grow.

FEMA was providing US$700 to displaced residents to cover the cost of food, water, first aid and medical supplies, in addition to qualifying coverage for the loss of homes and personal property.

The Biden Administration is seeking US$12 billion more for the Government’s disaster relief fund as part of its supplemental funding request to Congress.

Green said “leaders all across the board” have helped by donating over a million pounds (454,000 kilogrammes) of food as well as ice, water, diapers and baby formula. Some active duty US Marines have also joined the aid efforts.

“When people are hurting the community steps up and takes care of each other,” Lieutenant Governor Sylvia Luke said Monday.

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