A shocked U.S. President Barack Obama on Friday toured "heartbroken" Colorado neighborhoods torched by rampaging wildfires that have destroyed hundreds of homes and left two dead.
Crews are still searching for human remains in the ashes of homes destroyed by the Waldo Canyon Fire, which blazed into the outskirts of the state's second largest city Colorado Springs earlier this week.
The inferno has destroyed at least 346 houses and forced some 36,000 residents to evacuate, according to officials. It is still threatening some 20,000 homes and 160 commercial buildings.
Obama saw the smoke from nearby fires as he flew into Colorado Springs aboard Air Force One, then inspected some of the devastation and praised the "courage and determination and professionalism" of firefighters.
"They are genuine heroes," Obama said, after he visited a neighborhood where fires had struck indiscriminately, leaving some homes in ruins and others intact.
"You have a house that's cinders. Next to it, it's untouched," said Obama, who saw homes that had been turned into blackened ruins and several vehicles melted down to the frames. A smell of burnt wood hung in the air.
Ahead of his visit, Obama issued a disaster declaration that releases federal emergency funds.
Colorado Springs police chief Peter Carey announced a second death Friday, after a first body was found late Thursday. The remains of both victims were found in the same burned-out house.
"I'm sorry to report the remains of a second human being were discovered," Carey said, his voice breaking. Police spokeswoman Barbara Miller said the pair were believed to be husband and wife.
Officials fear others could have perished in the blaze that started last Saturday, and raged out of control on Tuesday and Wednesday whipped up by high winds.
"We've gotten calls from people who say they haven't heard from people," said Miller.
Firefighters made progress in dousing the flames: by late Friday the blaze was 25 percent contained, up from 15 percent earlier in the day, and had burned 17,073 acres (6,830 hectares), up from 16,750 acres Thursday, officials said.
Several other blazes across the mountainous western U.S. state were straining firefighting resources, said fire incident commander Rich Harvey.
The plan is to bring in more heavy equipment where possible "to further enhance our ability to put muscle down on the ground in front of this fire and keep it in its containment lines," Harvey said.
Some 33 crews were fighting the blazes with 76 engines and 11 bulldozers. Three helicopters had dropped 384,205 gallons of water.
Officials in Colorado Springs met privately on Thursday night with distressed evacuees -- many of whom fled with no time to collect their belongings.
"You never think it's going to happen to you," Rebekah Largent told reporters after leaving the meeting.
Her husband Byron said residents looked at lists of homes street-by-street.
"If your address wasn't there, that meant it (the house) was intact. And so you just look at the paper and you see destroyed, destroyed, destroyed, and you see one damaged and then destroyed, destroyed, destroyed," he said.
Bus tours of the ravaged areas are being organized for residents on Sunday, to allow them to see their homes.
The Waldo Canyon blaze forced the evacuation of the nearby U.S. Air Force Academy, where cadets joined fire crews in protecting their barracks and other buildings as the fire swallowed 10 acres of the academy's land.
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