Saturday Star

Cyclone Debbie brings floods, misery

-

SYDNEY: Flooding rivers swamped towns along Australia’s east coast, forcing tens of thousands of people to be evacuated as fast-flowing waters cut roads and destroyed bridges after the remnants of a powerful cyclone swept through the region.

The disaster zone from Cyclone Debbie stretched 1 000km from Queensland’s tropical resort islands and Gold Coast tourist strip to the farmlands of New South Wales, with more than 100 00 homes reportedly without power.

Six large rivers had hit flood levels and were still rising, said the Bureau of Meteorolog­y.

Flood sirens sounded before dawn at Lismore when the Wilsons River surged over the town’s levee.

By daybreak the centre of the town of 25 000 people in the Northern Rivers region of NSW was under water. Throughout the day several towns suffered the same fate and were submerged under floodwater­s.

Stranded residents climbed on to roofs of flooded homes to await rescuing, but fast-moving water and high winds hindered emergency crews reaching some people. Farmers moved livestock to higher ground, while others sandbagged property, desperatel­y trying to stop floodwater­s.

NSW police said they had recovered the body of a woman from floodwater­s yesterday, the first reported death since Cyclone Debbie hit on Tuesday. Authoritie­s had feared that people may have died overnight as floodwater­s rose swiftly in the dark.

“We’ve seen a lot of flood rescues here this morning,” Lismore State Emergency Service Deputy Controller Amanda Vidler said while floodwater­s lapped her feet in the hard-hit town.

She told of one rescue where she plucked a man from rushing water on the town’s main street.

“We put him in an inflatable and we got him out of there... yeah, we all got wet,” she said.

Cyclone Debbie, a category four storm, one short of the most powerful level five, pounded Queensland on Tuesday, smashing tourist resorts, bringing down power lines and shutting down coal mines, has become a huge rain depression.

Debbie will hit Australia’s economy, with economists estimating it will slow growth to under 2% in the first quarter.

In the Bowen Basin, the world’s single largest source of coal used to make steel, Glencore said its mines were not damaged by the storm. – Reuters .

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa