Dubai: The UAE authorities have started evacuating Emirati students in Southern California, which has been hit by wildfires.

A statement issued by the UAE Embassy in Washington said the emergency evacuation has been ordered by His Highness Shaikh Mohammad Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of UAE and Ruler of Dubai, and is being followed up by Shaikh Abdullah Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Foreign Minister, WAM reported.

Nearly 130 Emirati students live in Southern California. Saqr Ghobash, UAE Ambassador to the United States, urged all Emirati citizens to contact the embassy.

However, there are other UAE residents and students who are not registered with the embassy, who live in that area, and are being contacted by the embassy staff, the statement said.

Saqr Ghobash, the UAE Ambassador to the United States, urged all Emirati citizens to contact the embassy and ordered UAE diplomats to attend to calls and enquiries from students and their families.

The embassy has also set up a free hotline number: 1800 823 6911.

Season: Perfect recipe for wildfires

  • California's parched climate, often desiccated brush, and Santa Ana winds create the perfect recipe for wildfires. The Santa Anas begin in deserts to the east and rush erratically through mountain passes and canyons into Southern California communities.
  • During Santa Ana conditions, fires can be easily ignited by nature, in the case of lightning, or by humans. Some are arson, while others can be sparked by machinery operated near dry brush, campfires or carelessly tossed cigarettes. Downed power lines also pose a fire hazard. Once the wildfires are whipped by the winds, they spread quickly and are extremely dangerous and difficult to fight.
  • "Fire Season" officially begins in early summer and lasts through October, though officials say that as the state suffers through cyclical drought conditions, they consider the season to be almost year-round in Southern California.
  • The worst California wildfire of the past decade was the Cedar Fire in October of 2003, which killed 15 people and destroyed more than 4,800 structures, many of them houses, as it burned nearly 300,000 acres in San Diego County.
  • Earlier this year, Los Angeles firefighters battled major brush fires - one that blackened 817 acres in the city's landmark Griffith Park and another that threatened the town of Avalon on Catalina Island, 35 km off the coast. The Zaca fire burned through 240,000 acres of Santa Barbara ranchland for two months over the summer.

- Reuters