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Rainfall brings hope in Nova Scoatia wildfire battles

HALIFAX, NOVA SCOTIA (AP) – Officials in Canada’s Atlantic Coast province of Nova Scotia said on Saturday a wildfire that forced thousands of residents from their homes over the past week is now largely contained because of rain.

A technician of forest resources with Nova Scotia’s Department of Natural Resources and Renewables David Steeves, said the fire in the Halifax area is about 85 per cent contained, sits at 9.5 square kilometre (km2) and is unlikely to grow due to a combination of firefighting efforts and long-awaited rain.

The news was also good across the province, where Premier Tim Houston said the total number of active wildfires declined from 10 in the morning to five by mid-afternoon.

“If you step outside you will see something beautiful: rain, and hopefully lots of it,” he told an afternoon briefing.

The only fire that remains out of control is one in Shelburne County in the southwestern corner of the province which remains “scary”, Houston said.

Firefighters work on a fire in Shelburne County, Nova Scotia, Canada. PHOTOS: AP
Firefighters rest at a command centre within the evacuated zone of the wildfire

The blaze that broke out last Sunday in the Halifax area raced through a number of subdivisions, consuming about 200 structures – including 151 homes – and forcing the evacuation of more than 16,000 people.

Meanwhile, at the provincial wildfire centre in Shubenacadie, north of Halifax, about 20 Canadian Armed Forces soldiers stood in the pouring rain outside a light armoured vehicle.

Lieutenant Colonel Michael Blanchette said the initial contingent from Canadian Forces Base Gagetown in New Brunswick had arrived on a “fact-finding mission” to see what military support was needed in the effort to combat the fires. In Shelburne County, meanwhile, 6,700 people – about half the municipality’s population – remained out of their homes as the blaze that forced their evacuation continued to burn out of control.

The Barrington Lake wildfire, which started last Saturday, reached 230 km2 – the largest recorded wildfire in the province’s history. It has consumed at least 50 homes and cottages.

A spokesman for the Department of Natural Resources Dave Rockwood, said there was “cautious optimism” that there would be no further growth and that firefighters could use more direct tactics to contain it. Two other fires considered out of control as of Saturday morning were classified as “held” later in the day, he said.

Houston confirmed that schools in Shelburne County would be closed today and tomorrow.

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