Close X
Tuesday, December 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian evacuees tell of chaotic scenes in Maui wildfire 'war zone'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Aug, 2023 02:56 PM
  • Canadian evacuees tell of chaotic scenes in Maui wildfire 'war zone'

Canadians returning from Maui have told of harrowing scenes during their escape from the fire-devastated Hawaiian island.

Among the evacuees was British Columbia Supreme Court Justice Matthew Taylor who drove through the ruined town of Lahaina on Thursday and said it resembled a "war zone."

Taylor, who arrived in Vancouver Friday morning on an Air Canada ferry flight, said buildings on both sides of the highway out of Lahaina had been "razed to the ground."

"Driving through Lahaina was absolutely shocking. It was really, really sad," said Taylor. 

Officials in Hawaii say at least 55 people died this week after wildfires erupted on Maui in the state’s deadliest natural disaster since a 1960 tsunami killed 61 people. 

Governor Josh Green has warned that the death toll will likely rise as search and rescue operations continue.

Taylor had travelled to Maui with his family for a vacation on Monday night, staying north of Lahaina. They arrived to perilous scenes even before the fire, with high winds bringing down power lines and falling branches striking their car on a drive to pick up groceries.

“There were shingles coming off the roofs. It was scary. There were branches hitting our car and a long line of cars not barely moving,” said Taylor.

It was the high winds that whipped up the wildfire and drove it over Lahaina, Hawaii officials say. 

Taylor said that power and cellular communication went down where they were staying on Wednesday. It was then that a property manager told the family that Lahaina had been destroyed.  

The family decided to leave but was hampered by the lack of cellphone service.

"People were finding little areas out on the peninsula where they were waving their phones, just trying to get one or two bars (of reception)," said Taylor. 

Taylor said he eventually managed to get one bar on his phone, allowing him to book seats on Air Canada's second ferry flight out of the stricken island.

Other evacuees described chaotic scenes after the fire.

Ontario resident Jessie Watkins said they were given little warning before fire engulfed the town.

"It just happened so fast … the problem was the wind was so strong that all the power lines were gone down, and all the roads were closed. So you couldn't escape," said Watkins, who was on the same flight as Taylor. "You could see the fire coming at you."

Alberta resident Annette Burton said it was "a very surreal" experience in once-bustling Maui after the fire.

"Everything was shut down. Lahaina was like a ghost town. There were no businesses open. There was nowhere to eat," said Burton, who arrived in Vancouver Friday morning on a WestJet ferry flight. 

Air Canada said it was planning to send a third empty ferry flight to Maui on Friday night to bring back passengers to Vancouver Saturday morning.

WestJet said it had cancelled three flights from Vancouver to Maui's Kahului airport due to the fires and safety considerations. 

"We are working to notify all impacted guests and encourage them to check the status of their flights before heading to the airport," WestJet said in a statement.

WestJet said it had returned Maui evacuees to Vancouver on flights that arrived Thursday and Friday morning, with an additional recovery flight scheduled to arrive late Friday.

Global Affairs Canada has issued an advisory telling Canadians to avoid non-essential travel to Maui.

The advisory also warned that Canadians already on the island should consider if they really need to be there, and if not to "think about leaving."

Taylor, now home in Vancouver, said his heart goes out to residents of Maui.

"I don't know what the residents are going to do. There are no groceries there, people were running out of food," he said. 

MORE National ARTICLES

BC midwives and Province agree on 3 year wage increasing agreement

BC midwives and Province agree on 3 year wage increasing agreement
The new deal includes a series of fee increases and measures that the province says will provide more supports for Indigenous midwifery. A vote among members of the Midwives Association of British Columbia on July 31 garnered 99 per cent support for the agreement, with 89 per cent of eligible association members taking part in the ballot.

BC midwives and Province agree on 3 year wage increasing agreement

Harjot Singh Samra wanted Canada wide

Harjot Singh Samra wanted Canada wide
Harjot Singh Samra, 27, was to report to his halfway house in Vancouver once he was released from prison yesterday, but failed to do so. Samra is 5’9″, weighs 252 pounds, and has a heavy build. He has brown/black hair with a balding hairline, and brown eyes. 

Harjot Singh Samra wanted Canada wide

Collision between fuel truck and train in northern Alberta

Collision between fuel truck and train in northern Alberta
Emergency crews are at the scene of a collision between a fuel truck and a train in northern Alberta. RCMP say its officers received a report of the collision on Highway 43, near the junction of Highway 32, in Whitecourt, which is located about 180 kilometres northwest of Edmonton.  

Collision between fuel truck and train in northern Alberta

Feds to provide wildfire update

Feds to provide wildfire update
Officials have already said Canada is experiencing its worst fire season on record, charring more than 130,000 square kilometres to date, which is more than six times the 10-year average. Natural Resources Canada said last week there were more than 650 fires burning across Canada, about two-thirds of them in B.C. 

Feds to provide wildfire update

Concrete actions must accompany diverse cabinet: Canada Research Chair

Concrete actions must accompany diverse cabinet: Canada Research Chair
An academic expert on inclusive politics says Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's move last month to introduce more diversity into his cabinet won't have much effect unless it goes beyond surface-level representation. Trudeau added seven new faces to his governing team in July including the first Filipina Canadian woman MP and the first Sri Lankan Tamil to serve in cabinet.  

Concrete actions must accompany diverse cabinet: Canada Research Chair

Spike in rent across Canada

Spike in rent across Canada
The average asking rent in Canada went up last month to a record two-thousand and 78 dollars. A new report from Rentals-dot-c-a and research firm Urbanation says the total is 8.9 per cent higher than a year earlier.

Spike in rent across Canada

PrevNext