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Steve Holland

'We stand with you,' Biden tells Maui fire survivors

Joe and Jill Biden and Hawaii Governor Josh Green have inspected fire damage in Maui. (AP PHOTO)

US President Joe Biden has praised the "remarkable resiliency" of the people of Maui, after wildfires killed at least 114 people on the Hawaiian island two weeks ago, and said America would stand by them for as long as it takes.

“We’re focused on what’s next. That’s rebuilding for the long term …and doing it together,” said Biden on Monday, visibly moved after a tour of the blackened city of Lahaina. He added he would make sure “your voices are heard” and local traditions and wishes were respected.

"The American people stand with you," he told survivors of the August 8 wildfires, standing alongside Governor Josh Green, Hawaii's senators and the representative for Maui in Congress. 

"For as long as it takes, we're going to be with you."

Biden, wearing an ornate lei, later told 400 people at a community event that featured traditional music and heartfelt speeches by local leaders: "Jill and I are here to grieve with you but also we want you to know the entire country is here for you.”

He emphasised repeatedly that the rebuilding would follow the wishes of the people of Lahaina and lauded the strong sense of community he had seen during his visit.

"It’s going to be a long road," he said, noting the symbolism of an historic banyan tree where he spoke earlier that was damaged but survived the fires.

"I know it's a metaphor, but that's you. That's who you are. There’s no quit in Hawaii, there’s no quit in America, there’s no quit in us."

In both remarks, the president shared his own grief when a vehicle accident killed his first wife and young daughter, and said he recognised what Maui people were feeling - "that hollow feeling you have in your chest like you’re being sucked into a black hole".

Green thanked Biden for his help and praised what he called the unprecedented speed of the federal response.

Biden, who interrupted a vacation in California to visit Maui, spoke after a helicopter tour with first lady Jill Biden, the governor and lawmakers from the Kahului airport, along the coast to the ruins of Lahaina.

In Lahaina, his motorcade passed blackened neighbourhoods interspersed with untouched areas across the highway from the blue sea.

Many onlookers greeted the Bidens with the shaka, a hand gesture of thumb and little finger extended that signals aloha, a Hawaiian word that is often used as a greeting. A handful of other people held up raised middle fingers.

Biden, who is seeking re-election in 2024, has been criticised by some Republicans and others for his initial response to the Maui fires. Biden said on August 10 he would expand federal aid to Hawaii and promised help to anyone who needed it. He went several days without speaking about the tragedy while vacationing at his Delaware beach house.

The wind-whipped firestorm that raged through Lahaina in west Maui killed at least 114 people and the death toll is still mounting. The number of people officially believed missing is 850, down from more than 2000, Maui County Mayor Richard Bissen said overnight on Facebook.

The White House said Biden has been leading a "whole of government" effort to help Hawaii recover, and White House spokesperson Olivia Dalton told reporters aboard Air Force One he approved a Hawaii disaster declaration within about an hour of receiving it. Biden himself said he had not wanted to travel to Maui until he was assured he would not interfere with emergency response efforts.

Biden has visited many disaster zones, including places struck by hurricanes, floods and tornadoes, since becoming president in January 2021. His visit on Monday came as Tropical Storm Hilary dumped rain on Southern California and the Southwest.

Maui presents a special challenge as the remains of some of the victims are still being recovered from burned-out buildings.

Criswell said about 85 per cent of the disaster area has been searched, but the remainder includes large, multi-unit buildings that could take some time.

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