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Traumatized, Canada wildfire evacuees reach safety

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Visibly shaken, Margarita Carnicero recalled fearing for her life Friday as she sped to safety through the massive wildfire engulfing the Canadian town of Fort McMurray.

"We weren't sure we'd get through because of the thick smoke," she told AFP sitting in her dust-covered SUV alongside her teenage daughter Michelle.

"It was a terrible experience. I was afraid, but I tried not to show it (so as) not to frighten my daughter."

Their car packed with personal belongings and the family dog cowering on the back seat, the two were part of a police-led convoy through the burning Alberta oil sands town.

They were among the first wave to reach safety in Wandering River, a hamlet about 200 kilometers (125 miles) south of Fort McMurray, where others like them were filling up their tanks at the local gas station.

Almost 500 made the dangerous journey past the charred remains of cars and buildings, feeling the heat through their car windows from grass fires still burning on roadsides and flare-ups further away.

Volunteers load donated flats of water to be taken to a camp just outside of Wandering River  Canada...
Volunteers load donated flats of water to be taken to a camp just outside of Wandering River, Canada on May 5, 2016
Cole Burston, AFP/File

Carnicero said authorities had wanted to fly people trapped in the oil fields north of Fort McMurray to safety in Edmonton and Calgary as the wildfires closed in.

But many insisted on staying with their vehicles, packed with any possessions they could salvage quickly when the evacuation was ordered earlier in the week.

After spending all day Thursday on a roadside waiting for the highway south to open, Carnicero and her daughter finally headed out of the danger zone at 5:30 am Friday.

She and others described the gut-wrench of seeing their once-bustling city reduced to "dark and smoky" ruins as they drove past.

"With all of the smoke, the trip was hard on the lungs," said Greg Stengel, who also joined the convoy.

"We moved fast because (authorities) wanted us through there as quickly as possible," he said.

Flames engulf trees along a highway near Fort McMurray  Alberta on May 6  2016
Flames engulf trees along a highway near Fort McMurray, Alberta on May 6, 2016
Cole Burston, AFP

Stengel was at a work camp in the Athabasca oil sands with thousands of others doing seasonal maintenance on oil operations when the wildfires started. The camps were at near capacity.

Many had left immediately when the evacuation was first ordered late Tuesday. Stengel said he waited a while and suddenly found himself trapped.

He said he tested an escape route through Fort McMurray a few times in recent days but each time had been forced to turned back north.

- House still standing? -

Richard Erhunmwunsee, who came to work in Canada's oil patch two years ago from Nigeria, immediately began scouring the gas station's shelves for a tooth brush when he arrived in Wandering River.

He said remote video cameras in his neighbor's home in the Timberlea neighborhood on the north side of Fort McMurray showed it was still standing, so he was hopeful he would eventually be able to return.

Other neighborhoods he could see as he drove through Fort McMurray were not as lucky, he said. These included Beacon Hill, which he said was almost entirely burned to the ground

Evacuees Rick and Jane Stevens said they didn't know if their home was still standing.

"We'll do what we have to do (to rebuild)," said Jane Stevens.

She added that Shell, the oil company where her husband works, had reassured them that he would still have a job once the dust settled.

"(Rick's) job is safe, and that right there is very important because if you lose everything and you lose your job too then it would feel like there's no hope."

Visibly shaken, Margarita Carnicero recalled fearing for her life Friday as she sped to safety through the massive wildfire engulfing the Canadian town of Fort McMurray.

“We weren’t sure we’d get through because of the thick smoke,” she told AFP sitting in her dust-covered SUV alongside her teenage daughter Michelle.

“It was a terrible experience. I was afraid, but I tried not to show it (so as) not to frighten my daughter.”

Their car packed with personal belongings and the family dog cowering on the back seat, the two were part of a police-led convoy through the burning Alberta oil sands town.

They were among the first wave to reach safety in Wandering River, a hamlet about 200 kilometers (125 miles) south of Fort McMurray, where others like them were filling up their tanks at the local gas station.

Almost 500 made the dangerous journey past the charred remains of cars and buildings, feeling the heat through their car windows from grass fires still burning on roadsides and flare-ups further away.

Volunteers load donated flats of water to be taken to a camp just outside of Wandering River  Canada...

Volunteers load donated flats of water to be taken to a camp just outside of Wandering River, Canada on May 5, 2016
Cole Burston, AFP/File

Carnicero said authorities had wanted to fly people trapped in the oil fields north of Fort McMurray to safety in Edmonton and Calgary as the wildfires closed in.

But many insisted on staying with their vehicles, packed with any possessions they could salvage quickly when the evacuation was ordered earlier in the week.

After spending all day Thursday on a roadside waiting for the highway south to open, Carnicero and her daughter finally headed out of the danger zone at 5:30 am Friday.

She and others described the gut-wrench of seeing their once-bustling city reduced to “dark and smoky” ruins as they drove past.

“With all of the smoke, the trip was hard on the lungs,” said Greg Stengel, who also joined the convoy.

“We moved fast because (authorities) wanted us through there as quickly as possible,” he said.

Flames engulf trees along a highway near Fort McMurray  Alberta on May 6  2016

Flames engulf trees along a highway near Fort McMurray, Alberta on May 6, 2016
Cole Burston, AFP

Stengel was at a work camp in the Athabasca oil sands with thousands of others doing seasonal maintenance on oil operations when the wildfires started. The camps were at near capacity.

Many had left immediately when the evacuation was first ordered late Tuesday. Stengel said he waited a while and suddenly found himself trapped.

He said he tested an escape route through Fort McMurray a few times in recent days but each time had been forced to turned back north.

– House still standing? –

Richard Erhunmwunsee, who came to work in Canada’s oil patch two years ago from Nigeria, immediately began scouring the gas station’s shelves for a tooth brush when he arrived in Wandering River.

He said remote video cameras in his neighbor’s home in the Timberlea neighborhood on the north side of Fort McMurray showed it was still standing, so he was hopeful he would eventually be able to return.

Other neighborhoods he could see as he drove through Fort McMurray were not as lucky, he said. These included Beacon Hill, which he said was almost entirely burned to the ground

Evacuees Rick and Jane Stevens said they didn’t know if their home was still standing.

“We’ll do what we have to do (to rebuild),” said Jane Stevens.

She added that Shell, the oil company where her husband works, had reassured them that he would still have a job once the dust settled.

“(Rick’s) job is safe, and that right there is very important because if you lose everything and you lose your job too then it would feel like there’s no hope.”

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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