LOS ANGELES—Firefighters struggled to contain a runaway wildfire in the US state of Arizona Monday after 19 of their comrades were killed in one of the worst such incidents in US history and two towns were evacuated.
The firefighters died while racing to contain the Yarnell Hill wildfire about 85 miles (135 kilometers) north of Phoenix, in what Arizona governor Jan Brewer called “as dark a day as I can remember.”
The deadly blaze came amid baking temperatures and tinder-dry conditions across the US southwest, with records broken over the weekend in Arizona and California, and follows an already deadly wildfire season across the region.
President Barack Obama paid tribute to those who lost their lives, in a statement issued while traveling in South Africa which lamented “this terrible tragedy.”
“They were heroes—highly skilled professionals who, like so many across our country do every day, selflessly put themselves in harm’s way to protect the lives and property of fellow citizens they would never meet.”
Ignited by lightning
The Yarnell Hill fire, believed to have been ignited by lightning and fanned by high winds, broke out Friday and has swept across 2,000 acres, spreading rapidly through the dry, forested area.
Officials said that the incident was under investigation but that the firefighters appeared to have deployed fire shelters—last-ditch protection equipment— just before they were engulfed in flames.
“It’s not reality for us, it hasn’t really set in,” Wade Ward, a visibly shocked Prescott Fire Department spokesman, told CNN early Monday.
“It’s a very elite group of people who are highly trained, highly motivated, very fit… We don’t know what happened.”
Hundreds of residents of Yarnell and Peeples Valley were, meanwhile, evacuated, officials said on a fire alert website, as the blaze continued to tear through the area.
Prescott Fire Chief Dan Fraijo had earlier said he was “devastated” by the loss of lives.
“We just lost 19 of some of the finest people you will ever meet,” he said at a press conference Sunday. “We take safety precautions, but sometimes, unfortunately, sometimes it just doesn’t work out.”
Worst firefighter fatalities since 1933
Figures from the National Fire Protection Association, a non-profit organization, show that the Arizona deaths are the worst firefighter fatalities from a wildfire since 29 firefighters died fighting a blaze in Los Angeles’ Griffith Park in 1933.
Sunday’s deaths also mark the largest loss of firefighter lives on US soil since the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center, when 340 firefighters were killed, according to NFPA statistics.
Federal help was set to arrive on Monday, local news site the Arizona Republic reported, but officials expected at least 250 homes—about half the town of Yarnell—would be destroyed by the inferno.
“This is as dark a day as I can remember,” said Arizona governor Jan Brewer, as tributes poured in for the fallen firefighters.
Speaking to a local NBC affiliate Sunday, she added: “When we get these drought areas, sometimes it dries out, it just burns so quickly and so fast and tonight is another example of that.
“I guess it was a flash fire and it just turned around and it overcame them all. It was just one big swoop,” she told KPNX-TV.
A state forestry official told CNN the firefighters, from an elite local “hotshot” crew, had been digging a fire line to contain the blaze.
“Evidently, their safety zone wasn’t big enough, and the fire just overtook them,” Art Morrison said.
Facebook page for fallen firefighters
A Facebook page has been created in memory of the fallen firefighters, showing a picture of the Granite Mountain Hotshots crew from Prescott, Arizona, with 19 people in the photo.
“This devastating loss is a reminder of the grave risks our firefighters take every day on our behalf in Arizona and in communities across this nation. Their sacrifice will never be forgotten,” Arizona Senator John McCain said in a statement.
The Yarnell Hill wildfire is the worst of several blazes raging across the arid state and comes two weeks after a blaze in Colorado killed two people and burned down 360 homes, that western state’s most destructive blaze ever.
Record and near-record temperatures left much of the US southwest sweltering over the weekend, with Death Valley in California equaling the hottest ever June temperature in the United States, at 128 degrees Fahrenheit (53 Celsius).
The wildfire season in the southwest flared up earlier than usual this year, with California, Arizona and New Mexico the hardest hit.
As of Monday, there were over 40 active blazes in the four states, according to the inciweb fire information website.—Michael Thurston