The Scotsman

Australia to declare national emergency over east coast floods

- By ROD MCGUIRK

Australia's prime minister has said he will declare a national emergency following floods across swathes of the east coast that have claimed 22 lives.

Scott Morrison made the announceme­nt during a visit to flood-devastated Lismore in northern New South Wales state, where four people died last week.

He said the national emergency declaratio­n will "ensure all our emergency powers are available and that we cut through any red tape we might face in delivering services and support on the ground".

It is the first such declaratio­n since a law was passed in December 2020 in response to catastroph­ic wildfires during the previous Southern Hemisphere summer.

Extraordin­arily heavy rains have created the current emergency in New South Wales and Queensland states, where some of the flooded communitie­swerebattl­ingfirestw­oyears ago.

The declaratio­n means flood victims will not have to provide identifica­tion documents to receive support payments and in some circumstan­ces the federal government can act independen­tly in areas where the state government­s have not requested help.

Floodwater­s peaked in Brisbane, the capital of Queensland and Australia's thirdmost populous city, on February 28 after it was inundated by 80 per cent of its usual annual rainfall in three days.

More than 20,000 homes and businesses were flooded in south-east Queensland and 13 people died.

Sydney, the capital of New South Wales and Australia's biggest city with a population of five million, has endured the wettest start to a year ever recorded.

Parts of the city 450 miles south of Brisbane were flooded after receiving almost 75 per cent of its average annual rainfall since January 1.

The worst-hit communitie­s were in the Lismore, Clarence Valley and Richmond Valley local government areas of northern New South Wales.

Some communitie­s endured the highest floods ever recorded in their locations.

"This is a major catastroph­e ... of national proportion­s," Mr Morrison said in Lismore.

The number of military personnel helping in the flood recovery in northern New South Wales was to increase by 700 to 2,500 yesterday.

Many victims are angry that authoritie­s did not come to their rescue earlier. Many people

were rescued from flooded homes by neighbours.

If community members had not stepped up, "we would have been seeing a death toll in the hundreds of people", opposition emergency management spokesman Murray Watt told Australian Broadcasti­ng Corp.

"While people are grateful for the assistance they've had from the army, there's just nowhere near enough of it," he added.

Whilerainh­aseasedinr­ecent

days, 40,000 people around New South Wales had been ordered to evacuate, including fromdozens­ofsydneysu­burbs.

Northern Beaches m ayor Michael Regan said that part of Sydney had been hit with flashflood­ing and multiple landslips on Tuesday, with debris still blocking many roads yesterday.

"Yesterday was bizarre. It was intense. It was biblical," he told Nine Network television.

 ?? ?? 0 Ken Bridge stands in a pile of flood-damaged furniture outside his home in Lismore, New South Wales, following floods across swathes of the east coast
0 Ken Bridge stands in a pile of flood-damaged furniture outside his home in Lismore, New South Wales, following floods across swathes of the east coast
 ?? ?? 0 Australian prime minister Scott Morrison at a press conference in Lismore yesterday
0 Australian prime minister Scott Morrison at a press conference in Lismore yesterday

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