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Thousands flee Brisbane, flash floods kill 10

Up to 20,000 Brisbane homes to be flooded: state premier
Brisbane, Australia (AFP) Jan 12, 2011 - Up to 20,000 homes in Australia's third largest city of Brisbane are expected to be hit by flooding as rising waters besiege the city, Queensland state Premier Anna Bligh said Wednesday. "I understand that we could see up to 20,000 properties in Brisbane affected by the water and people do need to take that very seriously," she said. "That is an extraordinary amount of people and homes." Brisbane Mayor Campbell Newman confirmed that the number of homes expected to be hit by flooding from the rising river systems around the city had risen from 6,500 to 19,700 as he opened more evacuation centres for victims.

More than 6,500 residents of the stricken city were expected to take shelter in three evacuation centres, while thousands of others who live in threatened areas were expected to move in with family and friends. "I don't want to be in a position where we can't look after evacuees who turn up on our doorsteps," he told state broadcaster ABC. Under the new estimates, a further 3,500 commercial properties were expected to be deluged while 2,100 streets and around 30 suburbs in the city were at risk of inundation. The Brisbane River, which runs through the eastern city, is expected to exceed the 5.4-metre (nearly 18 feet) level it hit in devastating floods in 1974 as the city faced its worst deluge in nearly 120 years.

Many businesses in the city centre were forced to shut down as energy suppliers prepared to cut power to about 100,000 city customers, as generation facilities were threatened by water. Rains in the water-battered area of Queensland state abated for the first time in days on Wednesday, but Premier Bligh warned residents not to be complacent to the danger to life and property. "People can take no comfort from a blue sky because the rain has already done its damage in the catchment of our river system and this water is coming down at great speed," she told the ABC.
by Staff Writers
Brisbane, Australia (AFP) Jan 12, 2011
Thousands of people fled central Brisbane Tuesday as the panicked city braced for its worst flooding in 120 years, after terrifying flash floods left 10 dead and 78 missing nearby.

Workers evacuated en masse after the Brisbane River burst its banks and officials said 6,500 properties and the downtown area would be hit in Australia's third largest city, which was facing its biggest floods since 1893.

"This water is on its way," said Brisbane Lord Mayor Campbell Newman.

"Today is very significant, tomorrow is bad, and Thursday is going to be devastating for the residents and businesses concerned," he said.

The exodus by bus, train and car came a day after flash floods devastated the hillside town of Toowoomba, 125 kilometres (80 miles) west in Australia's Great Dividing Range, sweeping away houses and uprooting trees.

In Brisbane, panic-buying took hold as flood alerts were issued for dozens of suburbs and rescuers air-lifted hundreds of residents from outlying towns.

"At our local supermarket queues, all 12 tills were at least 50-60 people deep and all essentials were sold out -- perishables and non-perishables," said Brisbane lawyer Paul Betros, who was sent home when his central office building was evacuated.

"There was no bread, milk, batteries, bottled water, candles. The bakery had sold out of bread and was closing."

As the waters continued to rise, electricity supplier Energex said it was preparing to switch off power to some low-lying areas of Brisbane from Wednesday morning, affecting about 100,000 people.

The sudden loss of life in Toowoomba dramatically escalated a rolling flood disaster that has inundated vast swathes of Australia's northeast and crippled economic life.

The overall death toll now stands at 21 while three-quarters of Queensland state has been declared a disaster zone as a result of the relentless rains.

An emotional Queensland state premier Anna Bligh said more deaths were expected from the flash floods as rescuers, battling heavy rains and washed-away roads, reach cut-off communities.

"We are now in a very frightening experience," she said. "Can I appeal to everybody that it's at times like this that we all need to make an effort to stay calm, to be patient and stick together."

She later warned Queenslanders to prepare for more tragedy, saying: "With so many others outstanding and unaccounted for we still face very grim news as we continue the search and rescue activity."

Prime Minister Julia Gillard, dressed in sombre black, called images of the disaster "simply shocking".

"We have seen very dramatic images of cars tossed around, people on roofs of houses and on the roofs of cars and people literally hanging on for dear life to trees and to signposts," she said.

TV pictures showed Toowoomba's streets turned into churning rapids dotted with floating cars, some with people sitting on top, while elsewhere residents were forced onto roofs as waters lapped at awnings.

Five of the dead were children, some of them swept away in cars driven by their mothers. A man and a younger male died in Murphy's Creek near Toowoomba.

Bligh said the death toll had risen to 10 with the death of a four-year-old boy who fell out of a boat.

"This boy's life was lost during an attempt to rescue him and his family," Bligh told reporters, adding that the number of missing had risen from 59 to 78, with grave concerns for 15 people.

As Brisbane river neared its flood peak the city port late Tuesday was closed to ships in all but "emergency situations", Queensland emergency services Minister Neil Roberts said.

The city's airport, however, was expected to remain open throughout the crisis, airport authorities told national news agency AAP.

"Biblical" flooding across the coal-mining and farming belt follows weeks of rain blamed on the La Nina weather system, which has also dumped heavy snow on the northern United States.

Federal MP Ian MacFarlane described fearsome scenes in Toowoomba as the flash flood deluged the town before quickly subsiding, leaving scenes of destruction and people dead in their cars.

"We're just seeing building after building, the water rushing in and blowing the windows out," MacFarlane told Sky News. "Cars that were parked in the car parks were just lifted up and went bobbing down the street."

Toowoomba mayor Peter Taylor told the Seven Network that the flood struck without warning after two normally placid waterways suddenly overflowed, saying "people had no warning at all".

"It was just unprecedented. Some people are saying an inland tsunami, and I think that probably sums it up really," he said.



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SHAKE AND BLOW
'Dramatic' rain warning for flood-soaked Australia
Sydney (AFP) Jan 9, 2011
Heavy rains falling on Australia's flooded north-east could have a "dramatic" impact, officials warned Sunday, stretching already swollen rivers and creeks to their limit across the devastated region. Queensland police commissioner Alistair Dawson said that severe weather lashing the already sodden northeastern state could bring flash flooding to currently dry areas with little warning. ... read more







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