Bangkok Post

Floods begin to recede across west

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SYDNEY: Flood-hit swathes of Western Australia faced a long path to recovery yesterday as muddy waters receded to expose the full scale of recent damage to homes, roads and livestock.

In the deluged town of Fitzroy Crossing — home to about 1,000 people — the waters collapsed the main bridge, swept away road surfaces and damaged homes over the last week.

The floods created a vast inland lake in the northern part of Western Australia, also swamping much of Fitzroy Crossing and Indigenous communitie­s in the sparsely populated region.

“I don’t want to sugar-coat the challenge that lies ahead in terms of both housing and road constructi­on,” the state’s housing minister, John Carey, said on Wednesday according to public broadcaste­r ABC. “We have got to house people.”

Vast farms in the area are estimated to have lost many thousands of cattle, according to the Kimberley Pilbara Cattlemen’s Associatio­n.

“The impact on pastoral stations is going to be significan­t,” state agricultur­e minister Jackie Jarvis warned yesterday. “We actually won’t know the full impact for many months.”

The flood-struck Kimberley region covers a tract of land three times larger than the United Kingdom, but it has a population of less than 40,000.

Australia has been repeatedly lashed by heavy rain in the past two years, driven by back-to-back La Nina climate cycles.

Flash floods swept through parts of eastern Australia in November last year, tearing entire homes from their foundation­s in some country towns.

Tens of thousands of Sydney residents were ordered to evacuate in July when floods swamped the coastal city’s fringe.

And an east coast flooding disaster in March — caused by storms in Queensland and New South Wales — claimed more than 20 lives.

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