 
                                    Maui's emergency management chief has defended his agency's decision against sounding sirens during last week's deadly wildfire amid questions about whether doing so might have saved lives.
Herman Andaya, administrator of the Maui County Emergency Management Agency, said sirens in Hawaii are used to alert people to tsunamis. Using it during the fire might have led people to evacuate toward the danger, he told reporters.
The grassland fire on August 8 raced down the base of a volcano sloping into the tourist resort town of Lahaina, killing at least 110 people and destroying or damaging some 2,200 buildings.
"The public is trained to seek higher ground in the event that the siren is sounded," Andaya said during a press conference, which grew tense at times as reporters questioned the government response during the fire.
"Had we sounded the siren that night, we're afraid that people would have gone mauka (to the mountainside) and if that was the case then they would have gone into the fire," Andaya said.
Maui, instead, relied on two different alert systems, one that sent text messages to phones and another that broadcast emergency messages on television and radio, Andaya said.
Since the sirens are primarily located on the waterfront, they would have been useless to people on higher ground, he said.
Hawaii Governor Josh Green also defended the decision not to sound sirens. Green has ordered the state attorney general to conduct a comprehensive review of the emergency response that would bring in outside investigators and experts, clarifying on Wednesday that the review is "not a criminal investigation in any way".
"The most important thing we can do at this point is to learn how to keep ourselves safer going forward," Green said.

 
                                 
                                        
 Turkey to host Gaza meeting amid ceasefire concerns
            Turkey to host Gaza meeting amid ceasefire concerns
         Tanzania opposition says hundreds killed in vote protests
            Tanzania opposition says hundreds killed in vote protests
         Turkey sentences 11 people to life in prison over ski resort hotel fire
            Turkey sentences 11 people to life in prison over ski resort hotel fire
         China sends its youngest astronaut to 'Heavenly Palace' space station
            China sends its youngest astronaut to 'Heavenly Palace' space station
         Israel launches more strikes on Gaza overnight, testing fragile truce
            Israel launches more strikes on Gaza overnight, testing fragile truce
         Trump-Putin summit cancelled, FT reports
            Trump-Putin summit cancelled, FT reports
         Houthis say 43 detained UN staff to face trial over Israeli attack
            Houthis say 43 detained UN staff to face trial over Israeli attack
         Hurricane Melissa leaves 49 dead in Caribbean, churns north
            Hurricane Melissa leaves 49 dead in Caribbean, churns north
         
                             
                             
                             
                                    