Headlines
  • Spain defeats Argentina in the final to win their second World Cup.
  • Bahrain's interior ministry reported that its air raid sirens had sounded overnight on Sunday and Monday.
  • During what U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) called "a controlled detonation of unexploded ordnance from a downed Iranian one-way attack drone" in northern Iraq on Saturday, one American service member was killed and another was injured.
  • Three missiles launched from Iran struck various parts of Jordan, according to a statement posted by the army online on Sunday.
  • On Sunday, the International Atomic Energy Agency said that it was "looking into reports of an overnight attack on the construction site of a planned nuclear power plant in Darkhovin, Iran," following allegations of a U.S. strike on the facility made by Iran's Atomic Energy Organization.
  • Early on Sunday morning, a shooting in Tucson, Arizona, left nine people injured, the alleged gunman was shot by police and sent to a nearby hospital with life-threatening fatal injuries.

More Details

Some of Those ‘Missing’ After California Fire Are Just Fine

Dixie Singh is No. 158 on the official list of people missing after Northern California’s catastrophic wildfire. That came as news to her.

“I am the only Dixie Singh I’ve ever heard of. And I am alive,” the 86-year-old woman said Wednesday.

Singh’s story illustrates the confusion and uncertainty that persist three weeks after the nation’s deadliest wildfire in a century ripped through a string of communities with astonishing speed and destruction. But it also offers hope that others listed as unaccounted for will turn up and not be added to the already staggering death toll of 88.

As of Thursday, the number of names on the daily list put out by the Butte County Sheriff’s office was 197, down from a high of 1,300 two weeks ago.

The Associated Press found Singh through a public records search that listed a cellphone number for her friend Allan Bates, 84, who was equally puzzled over why she was considered missing when he answered his phone.

“Huh? You’re looking for Dixie? You want to talk to her? She’s right next to me,” he said.

The inferno Nov. 8 all but leveled the town of Paradise, home to 27,000, and ravaged neighboring communities, forcing thousands to flee. As authorities continue combing the charred ruins for human remains and collecting DNA samples from relatives, they are trying to determine who on the list is truly missing.

Photo Courtesy: CAL FIRE /Facebook

Many survivors have scattered to other towns or cities and did not think to tell authorities or relatives that they were safe. Many are elderly and may not have cellphones. Some, like Singh, had no idea they were on the ever-evolving roster posted nightly on the sheriff’s website.

Singh and Bates fled their home in Paradise, driving down flaming roads as they heard explosions and got stuck in traffic.

“Hell could not have been any worse. It was terrible, terrible, terrible,” said Singh, speaking from an apartment the couple is now renting in nearby Chico. Both said they had told friends and family members that they made it out safely, and Singh did not know why her name had been put on the list.

Another person not missing is Terumi Newton, No. 109.

Her former daughter-in-law, Marge Newton, lives 800 miles (1,300 kilometers) away in Birch Bay, Washington, and had been exchanging regular phone calls with investigators and law enforcement officials on the ground.

After weeks of searching, she got a call Wednesday saying her 82-year-old former mother-in-law was safe. The call was not from sheriff’s authorities but from a Red Cross worker who told her the elderly woman had checked in at a shelter at a church in Chico on the day the fire swept through.

“She signed in on the 8th, on the same day of the evacuation, but nobody forwarded the list to the sheriff’s office,” said Newton, who expressed frustration at the oversight but also empathy for first responders dealing with a disaster of such magnitude. Overall, she felt relief, she said.

“Now, I can call off my search,” she said. “In the end, people on that list are safe and well, and that’s what matters.”

Newton was not on the updated list released Thursday.

Fluid’ list

Sheriff’s authorities have faced criticism over spotty communication with outside agencies aiding the relief effort but insist they are constantly cross-checking names of survivors.

“We’ve interfaced with the Red Cross,” Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea said last week. “Not only are they checking it, we double-check with them. That’s an ongoing process because people come in and they go out.”

Honea has repeatedly called the list “fluid” and “dynamic.” If someone calls in and reports a friend or relative who lived in Paradise can’t be reached, the person is added to the list and remains there until tracked down by authorities.

Sometimes a name is removed, only to be added again when someone else inquires about that person. Sometimes a name is misspelled and appears twice under different spellings.

That was the case with Mirella Harrison of Paradise, who first appeared on the list Nov. 15 as Marilla Harrison. Over the next 11 days, her name also appeared as Mallela and Marrcela. Sometimes she was listed twice with correct and incorrect spellings.

Her brother, Bill Engfelt, couldn’t reach her and reported her missing.

Someone from the sheriff’s office called him every day to check in but had no answers. Engfelt, who lives in San Diego, bought a plane ticket to Sacramento and planned to drive to Paradise and distribute flyers with her picture and give authorities a DNA swab on the chance his sister’s remains were found.

But then Monday, he learned she was safe. She was in a hotel room in Vacaville, 120 miles (190 kilometers) south of Paradise.

“She should have called me days ago,” Engfelt said. The confirmation came not through official channels but from his sister’s real estate agent, one of many people Engfelt called as he tried to find her.

Social media

Confusion is common in the aftermath of disasters. In last year’s Northern California wine country wildfires, Sonoma County authorities at one point listed more than 2,000 people as missing but slowly whittled down the number. In the end, 44 people died in the series of fires in several California counties.

The enormity of the disaster this time is far greater. The Camp Fire destroyed nearly 19,000 structures, compared with 5,600 in Napa and Sonoma Counties last year. It spread across 240 square miles (620 square kilometers), an area five times the size of San Francisco.

Many people searching for loved ones have found help through social media, like Delisa Gaeta, one of many who posted messages to a Facebook group called Camp Fire Missing Persons.

“I went to that Facebook page and yelled out, ‘Is Dale Wingett still alive?’ and people just grabbed on,” said Gaeta, who also called the sheriff’s office to report her foster father missing.

For weeks, she heard nothing and was starting to think the worst. On Monday, good news arrived via a Facebook message from a friend who forwarded her a story in the Redding Record Searchlight newspaper. It had a photograph of a man named Dale Wingett, smiling as he filled his plate at a Thanksgiving buffet for survivors at a Holiday Inn in Redding.

“I couldn’t believe it. There he was at the Holiday Inn eating turkey!” said Gaeta, 55, of Santa Clara.

Only the day before, Sunday, the sheriff’s office called her to say officials still had no information on Wingett’s whereabouts but could confirm that his house burned down.

Gaeta said her mind is now at ease, but she is still trying to find Wingett and talk with him.

“It’s not over until I can speak to him and know if there is anything I can do to help,” she said. (VOA)

Related Article

Chinese Police Arrest Uyghur Sisters and…

Chinese authorities in Xinjiang’s regional capital Urumqi on July 4 arrested two Uyghur sisters an ...
July 18, 2026

North Korean Buildings Near DMZ Could…

North Korea has constructed at least 21 identical drive-through structures near its border with Sout ...
July 17, 2026

Philippines Marks 10 Years Since Historic…

As the Philippines marks the 10th anniversary of an arbitration ruling it won against China in the ...
July 14, 2026

Myanmar Removes At Least 15 Statues…

removed or destroyed at least 15 statues of Gen. Aung San, who led the country to independence from ...
July 11, 2026

Tibetan Activist Dies After Setting Himself…

A Tibetan activist died Thursday after setting himself on fire outside the United Nations headquarte ...
July 4, 2026

PNG Received Millions After Cyclone Maila,But…

After Cyclone Maila devastated parts of Papua New Guinea in April, disaster relief funds poured into ...
July 2, 2026

Other Article

News & Views

Chinese Police Arrest Uyghur Sisters and…

Chinese authorities in Xinjiang’s regional capital Urumqi on July 4 arrested two Uyghur sisters an ...
July 18, 2026
Pick of the Day

UN Secretary-General Addresses World Artificial Intelligence…

United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres addresses the opening session of the World Artifi ...
Bizzare News

At Tidal Flats,Seal Pup Found with…

After being shot in the head, a seal pup found in a tidal basin in Washington is recovering.Accordin ...
July 17, 2026
Pet Corner

Transylvanian First Romanian Origin Cat Breed

The newest cat breed Transylvanian, which originated in the mountainous Carpathian regions, especial ...
Prevent Cyber Crime

AI Powered Zero-Day Attacks Detection and…

Zero-day attacks take use of unknown vulnerabilities in firmware, hardware, or software before devel ...
News & Views

North Korean Buildings Near DMZ Could…

North Korea has constructed at least 21 identical drive-through structures near its border with Sout ...

Top