<p>Australian firefighters have managed to contain a bushfire burning near Perth, authorities said Saturday, allowing them to downgrade the blaze which has destroyed 86 homes.</p>.<p>Despite another night battling the fire amid strong winds on the fringes of Australia's fourth-biggest city, crews managed to hold the blaze back and reduced the emergency warning to a watch-and-act alert ahead of forecast rains.</p>.<p>"I am really happy to report that the Wooroloo fire is now 100 per cent contained," Western Australia state fire commissioner Darren Klemm told media.</p>.<p>But Klemm warned that the blaze was still burning inside containment lines and winds up to 60 kilometres an hour (37 mph) were also expected.</p>.<p>Preparations were now underway to allow evacuated residents to return home including to the hard-hit suburb of Tilden Park -- where an estimated 80 per cent of properties were lost.</p>.<p>"This is a great outcome, and it gives those residents of those terribly affected areas, particularly around Tilden Park, access back," Klemm said.</p>.<p>Seven firefighters have sustained minor injuries, but no deaths have been reported in the bushfire, which has scorched more than 10,000 hectares (24,700 acres) since it was sparked Monday.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/bushfire-smoke-blankets-australian-city-under-covid-19-lockdown-946863.html" target="_blank">Bushfire smoke blankets Australian city under Covid-19 lockdown</a></strong></p>.<p>It comes about a year after Australia was hit by unprecedented climate change-fuelled bushfires that devastated whole communities and killed billions of animals.</p>.<p>More than 3.5 million hectares were burned across Western Australia during 2019-2020, but the state was largely spared the loss of properties and lives seen in the country's more densely populated southeast.</p>.<p>Scientists say fires are becoming more frequent and intense due to climate change, with people living in urban-bushland areas like the Perth Hills especially vulnerable to the impact of blazes.</p>.<p>As recovery efforts continued returning residents were told to be wary of falling trees downed by strong winds.</p>.<p>"I really want to stress that, those homeowners that have lost their homes, you know, we're here for the long haul," Klemm said.</p>.<p>The bushfire hit a population that had just been forced into a snap lockdown after a rare coronavirus case was detected in a man working in a quarantine hotel for arriving international travellers.</p>.<p>About two million people in and around Perth fell under the stay-at-home orders which ended on Friday night.</p>
<p>Australian firefighters have managed to contain a bushfire burning near Perth, authorities said Saturday, allowing them to downgrade the blaze which has destroyed 86 homes.</p>.<p>Despite another night battling the fire amid strong winds on the fringes of Australia's fourth-biggest city, crews managed to hold the blaze back and reduced the emergency warning to a watch-and-act alert ahead of forecast rains.</p>.<p>"I am really happy to report that the Wooroloo fire is now 100 per cent contained," Western Australia state fire commissioner Darren Klemm told media.</p>.<p>But Klemm warned that the blaze was still burning inside containment lines and winds up to 60 kilometres an hour (37 mph) were also expected.</p>.<p>Preparations were now underway to allow evacuated residents to return home including to the hard-hit suburb of Tilden Park -- where an estimated 80 per cent of properties were lost.</p>.<p>"This is a great outcome, and it gives those residents of those terribly affected areas, particularly around Tilden Park, access back," Klemm said.</p>.<p>Seven firefighters have sustained minor injuries, but no deaths have been reported in the bushfire, which has scorched more than 10,000 hectares (24,700 acres) since it was sparked Monday.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/bushfire-smoke-blankets-australian-city-under-covid-19-lockdown-946863.html" target="_blank">Bushfire smoke blankets Australian city under Covid-19 lockdown</a></strong></p>.<p>It comes about a year after Australia was hit by unprecedented climate change-fuelled bushfires that devastated whole communities and killed billions of animals.</p>.<p>More than 3.5 million hectares were burned across Western Australia during 2019-2020, but the state was largely spared the loss of properties and lives seen in the country's more densely populated southeast.</p>.<p>Scientists say fires are becoming more frequent and intense due to climate change, with people living in urban-bushland areas like the Perth Hills especially vulnerable to the impact of blazes.</p>.<p>As recovery efforts continued returning residents were told to be wary of falling trees downed by strong winds.</p>.<p>"I really want to stress that, those homeowners that have lost their homes, you know, we're here for the long haul," Klemm said.</p>.<p>The bushfire hit a population that had just been forced into a snap lockdown after a rare coronavirus case was detected in a man working in a quarantine hotel for arriving international travellers.</p>.<p>About two million people in and around Perth fell under the stay-at-home orders which ended on Friday night.</p>