A state of emergency has been declared in the Australian capital city Canberra and its surrounding areas due to the threat of bushfires.
It will run for 72 hours, giving authorities more powers to order evacuations, close roads and take control of private property.
Officials said an uncontrolled fire in the region's south is burning over more than 18,500 hectares.
It is the first time that a state of emergency has been announced for the Australian Capital Territory since 2003, when fires destroyed almost 500 homes.
An extreme heatwave is currently sweeping across the country, with high temperatures and dry winds expected to spark more bushfires over the weekend.
Since September, bushfires have killed 33 people and an estimated 1 billion native animals, with 2,500 homes destroyed.


Trump vows no more attacks by Israel on Iran gas field after it 'violently lashed out'
Saudi Arabia trust with Iran hard to 're-establish', foreign minister says
QatarEnergy says several LNG facilities targeted by missiles, fires contained
Kuwait foils terror plot targeting vital facilities
Qatar declares Iranian attachés 'persona non grata'