Frustration for survivors as Australian bushfires smolder

A woman dresses a  boy in donated clothes in Whittlesea, north of Melbourne.
As fires smoldered and sometimes raged across sections of the scarred landscape Tuesday, rescue officials in Victoria attempted to offer solace to hundreds burned out of their homes and frustrated at being unable to return.

Tent cities sprung up around Whittlesea, just north of Melbourne, as relief agencies pitched camps for those forced out of their homes. Weekend bushfires “completely wiped out” the towns of Marysville and Kinglake, officials said. More than 20 fires were burning Tuesday, according to the Country Fire Authority. Frustration also brewed as residents desperately wanted to return to their homes, or what was left of them, but were prevented by authorities because of safety concerns. The toll from Saturday’s inferno has grown day by day. Police in the state of Victoria put the number of deaths from the fires at 181 on Tuesday. Watch survivors coping with the grief » “We think there will be more deaths,” Police Chief Christine Nixon said. “It’s a major issue … that we’re finding more bodies as we gain access to locations.” But there was hope. Watch an emotional reunion for a couple separated during the bushfires » “We don’t muck around in this country. It will be back to the same in 18 months,” said Ash Phelin, a volunteer worker helping displaced families. “It might not look the same. It’ll be a bit burnt. But it’ll be back.” Photos: Bushfires leave path of destruction » The scope and scale of the fire brought Monique Locklier to help her bush mates. “It’s up the road from where we live,” she said. “It’s the worst tragedy we’ve ever seen and I hope we never see it again.” iReport.com: ‘Thank God we were spared’ Charitable contributions continued to pour into the Salvation Army as Australians were touched by the crisis. “We’re in the midst of this huge financial crisis and people want to give,” Major Rodney Barnard said. “The Salvation Army has been running an appeal and we’ve raised in excess of AUS$2 million (US$1.3 million).”

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The need for humanitarian aid is expected to be great, with Prime Minister Kevin Rudd laying out the costs of the fires before Parliament. In addition to those killed, more than 500 people were injured, nearly 1,000 homes were destroyed, thousands were left homeless and 365,000 hectares (901,935 acres) of the Australian countryside have been burnt black, he said. See a map of the area » “The seventh of February will become etched in our national memory as a day of disaster, of death and of mourning,” Rudd said, as he announced that offers of assistance had poured in from around the world, including from France, Japan, New Zealand, Singapore, Thailand and the United States. “All Victorians and all Australians should know that in this darkest hour, they are not alone,” he said. German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy wrote letters to Rudd expressing their condolences.

“I would like to express my deep, profound sympathy to you, the families and loved ones of the victims, and the Australian people,” Merkel wrote. “To the wounded I wish a quick and full recovery.” Sarkozy also offered his support and suggested that the French island territory of New Caledonia in the Pacific could be used as a staging ground for supplies to Australia.

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