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Cyclone, Rain Leave ‘Utter Disaster’ on Australia’s East Coast


A resident watches as floodwaters enter the main street of Lismore, Australia, March 31, 2017, after heavy rains associated with Cyclone Debbie swelled rivers to record heights across the region.
A resident watches as floodwaters enter the main street of Lismore, Australia, March 31, 2017, after heavy rains associated with Cyclone Debbie swelled rivers to record heights across the region.

Swollen rivers flooded entire towns along Australia’s east coast Friday, cutting roads and leaving residents clinging to roofs and floating down streets in boats after the remnants of a powerful cyclone swept through the region.

Flood sirens sounded before dawn at Lismore when the Wilsons River surged over the town’s levee. By daybreak the center of the town of 25,000 people in the Northern Rivers region of the state of New South Wales (NSW) was underwater.

Cars sit submerged after heavy rain associated with Cyclone Debbie hit the Gold Coast suburb of Robina in Queensland, Australia, March 30, 2017.
Cars sit submerged after heavy rain associated with Cyclone Debbie hit the Gold Coast suburb of Robina in Queensland, Australia, March 30, 2017.

Water was at roof level and cars, trash bins and other debris washed down streets, as residents fled and farmers drove their cattle to higher ground.

“We have everything happening, we’ve got people on rooftops, we’ve had people stuck in vans, it’s a disaster, an utter disaster,” NSW State Emergency Services Controller Ian Leckie told Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) radio.

No deaths reported yet

The aftermath of Cyclone Debbie, which pounded Queensland state Tuesday, smashing tourist resorts, bringing down power lines and shutting down coal mines, has become a huge rain depression.

No deaths were reported so far from the storm, but there are still fears that fatalities may emerge after emergency workers logged more than 100 flood rescues during the night. Gales and huge surf swells lashed the coast around Cape Byron.

“I suspect there may be people that may have perished overnight as a result of those conditions,” said NSW State Emergency Service Deputy Commissioner Mark Morrow told ABC.

Authorities have ordered almost 20,000 people to evacuate to higher ground across parts of southern Queensland and the neighboring NSW, where thousands of schools also shut.

At Murwillumbah, a NSW town of 8,000 people, weather forecasters said the major Tweed River was beyond its banks and running higher than previously recorded.

“The water’s the highest I’ve ever seen it, heaps of shops are closed and most places shut at midday yesterday and everyone went home while they still could,” Natasha Bolden told Reuters from the Murwillumbah Golf Club.

“The south side is underwater,” she said.

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull looks at damaged and flooded areas from aboard an Australian Army helicopter after Cyclone Debbie passed through the area near the town of Bowen, south of the northern Queensland town of Townsville in Australia,March 30, 2017.
Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull looks at damaged and flooded areas from aboard an Australian Army helicopter after Cyclone Debbie passed through the area near the town of Bowen, south of the northern Queensland town of Townsville in Australia,March 30, 2017.

Damage up north being tallied

In the cyclone-hit zone further north in Queensland, holidaymakers evacuated resort islands along the world-famous Great Barrier Reef, where the storm was strongest.

Miners Glencore and BHP, said they were still assessing the extent of any disruption to coal shipments.

Queensland’s top insurers, Suncorp Group and RACQ, said it was too early to put a dollar figure on the damage.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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