United States: More firefighters entered the regions of Los Angeles on Monday to combat more powerful winds that are predicted to cause new fires that may reimpose the recent progress in controlling fires that have razed down properties and claimed 24 lives.
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Firefighters, fire engines, water tenders, helicopters, and airplanes from the US and northern neighbors Canada and Mexico were on the scene with water-carrying trucks and planes with chemicals used to fight fires as the National Weather Service the coming days to be “particularly dangerous.”
He said that meteorology has extended severe fire conditions until Wednesday, with potential mph gusts to 65mph (105 kph) in the mountains.
Sunday night at a community meeting, fire behavior analyst Dennis Burns said that the day that will bring the most dangerous fire conditions will be a Tuesday, AP News reported.
The relative quiet experienced on Sunday meant that some persons were able to go back to areas they had been forced to leave.

The comparatively stable conditions Sunday let some of the evacuees come back to the areas they left before.
The figure rose later that same early hours of the late Sunday with reports from the Los Angeles County medical examiner.
Authorities statement
At least 16 individuals were reported missing after the disaster; even that figure, officials warned, is likely to increase problem references.
Santa Ana winds have mainly been blamed for transforming the wildfires that started in the past week into infernos that razed various parts of the country’s second-largest city, amid which there has been no precipitation for more than eight months, AP News reported.
Four fires that have occurred in the space of a week in the nation’s second-biggest city have burnt more than 62 square miles (160 square kilometers) of land – thrice the size of Manhattan.

Most of that devastation has been caused by the Eaton Fire near Pasadena and the Palisades Fire in a super-rich area a few miles inland from the Pacific Ocean.
Firefighters have clawed further back in the last few days. They staked some gains in beating back the flames on two fronts, where the Eaton Fire is now 30 percent contained.
As Anthony C. Marrone, Los Angeles County Fire Chief, added, seventy more water trucks arrived to help firefighters fend off flames spread by renewed gusts.
“We are prepared for the upcoming wind event,” Marrone added.