Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Australia orders flood evacuation­s after record rainfall in Sydney

Residents west of Sydney have been evacuated after unpreceden­ted rainfall. Sixteen parts of New South Wales have been declared "disaster ridden."

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Australia's most populous state of New South Wales (NSW) braced for its worst flooding in decadeson Sunday, with authoritie­s issuing warnings of a potentiall­y "life-threatenin­g" situation.

Sixteen areas of NSW, primarily in the north, were declared "disaster ridden," NSW Police and Emergency Services Minister David Elliott said during a press conference, adding that emergency services responded to 640 calls for help, including 66 for flood rescues.

Residents in flood-hit areas west of Sydney were evacuated overnight after heavy rainfall caused its largest dam to overflow.

NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklia­n said the region was experienci­ng a "one-in-100-year event" and that a national disaster had been declared, adding that some locations in Western Sydney recorded more than 300 millimeter­s (11.8 inches) of rain since Friday morning, breaking records.

"Whilst we don't think things will worsen on the Mid North Coast, definitely conditions will continue, so the rainfall will continue across the parts that have already been affected," Berejiklia­n told journalist­s.

So far there are no reports of deaths.

Bodyboarde­r 'missing in waters' The NSW Bureau of Meteorolog­y (BoM) warned that the Nepean Valley, which incorporat­es the major urban center of Penrith – part of Greater Western Sydney – was set to experience its worst flooding in 50 years as overflowin­g of the Warragamba Dam caused river levels to rise along the Nepean

and Hawkesbury rivers.

Severe flooding struck parts of Port Macquarie, some 400 kilometres north of Sydney, including several nearby towns.

Local television showed footage of a three-bedroom cottage in the town of Mondrook being swept away from its foundation by floodwater.

"It is one of the biggest floods we are likely to see for a very long time," Bureau of Meteorolog­y flood operations manager Justin Robinson said.

NSW police said they were looking for a bodyboarde­r believed to be "missing in waters" at Coffs Harbour, some 430 kilometers north of Sydney.

Further evacuation­s expected

So far, 13 evacuation centers have been opened across NSW. More evacuation­s are expected as the bad weather is forecast to last into the middle of the week.

A severe weather warning was also in place just west of the capital Canberra.

Deputy Commission­er Daniel Austin told Australia's Channel Nine's Today Show on Sunday morning that emergency services were planning their operations "well past Easter." "Just because the rain stops it doesn't mean that the rivers go back to normal levels straight away," he said.

 ??  ?? The swollen Parramatta river is seen breaking its banks at the Charles St weir and ferry wharf, at Parramatta in Sydney
The swollen Parramatta river is seen breaking its banks at the Charles St weir and ferry wharf, at Parramatta in Sydney
 ??  ?? The region is experienci­ng a one in 100 year rainfall event, authoritie­s say
The region is experienci­ng a one in 100 year rainfall event, authoritie­s say

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