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Massive floods strand over 50,000 in eastern Australia

Massive floods strand over 50,000 in eastern Australia

Jordan Times22-05-2025
This frame grab from a handout video footage taken between May 21 and 22, 2025 and released on May 22, 2025 by the New South Wales Police Force shows a police helicopter rescue of residents stranded on rooftops in flooded areas near the NSW town of Taree (AFP photo)
SYDNEY — Record floods stranded more than 50,000 people in eastern Australia on Thursday, killing three as a muddy tide swept through towns and swollen rivers cut off roads.
Police have pulled three bodies from rising floodwaters on the Mid North Coast, a river-braided region of rugged hills and fertile valleys about 400 kilometres north of Sydney.
Authorities launched a major search-and-rescue mission as people clambered atop cars, houses and highway bridges to escape fast-moving flash floods.
The storms have dumped more than half a year's worth of rain over just three days, the government weather bureau said, smashing flood-height records in some areas.
"We are seeing levels in local tributaries, creeks and rivers that we haven't seen since 1920," New South Wales (NSW) state premier Chris Minns told reporters.
"Many people will have never seen this level of inundation or flooding in their communities."
The town of Kempsey, a farming hub on the banks of the Macleay River, had been cut off with little warning, Mayor Kinne Ring told AFP.
"You often think of rain on a tin roof as relaxing, but at the moment it is deafening and horrible," Ring said.
"The downpours are torrential and every time it rains, you wonder what is going to happen next."
Ring said more than 20,000 people were isolated in her local government area alone.
About 140 kilometres south in the town of Taree, business owner Jeremy Thornton said the "gut-wrenching" flood was among the worst he had seen.
"It is pretty tough, we've had a few moments but you have to suck it up and push on," he told AFP.
"We are reliving it every second -- hearing the rain, hearing the helicopters, hearing the siren."
Authorities said more than 50,000 people were cut off, with some rivers still to reach peak levels late on Thursday.
An elderly couple climbed on to the roof of their car to escape a fast-rising flash flood before a rescue helicopter winched them to safety, NSW police in Taree said in a statement.
Others sought sanctuary on a raised highway bridge before they were spotted and rescued by a navy Seahawk chopper.
Locals spotted dead cows washing up on beaches after swollen rivers swept them from their pastures inland.
The government has declared the emergency a natural disaster, unlocking greater resources for affected areas.
Police said they were still searching for one person reported missing.
'Abnormally warm'
Flood modelling expert Mahdi Sedighkia said the unfolding disaster provided "compelling evidence" showing how climate change could affect regional rainfall patterns.
"These events demonstrate that our understanding of flood probability -- based on past hydrological studies -- is no longer adequate in the face of present-day climate realities," said the Australian National University's Sedighkia.
Swaths of Australia from the arid outback to the tropical coast have been pummelled by wild weather in recent months.
The oceans surrounding Australia have been "abnormally warm" in recent months, according to the weather bureau.
Warmer seas evaporate more moisture into the atmosphere, which can eventually lead to more intense rains.
Although difficult to link to specific disasters, scientists warn that climate change is already fuelling more extreme weather patterns.
"I don't think there is a question that climate change is having a significant impact on weather events right across the world," Australian Emergency Management Minister Kristy McBain told reporters.
"In Australia, we're not immune to that. We're seeing more devastating events like this happen more frequently."
About 2,500 emergency workers have been deployed to the region, alongside rescue boats, a fleet of helicopters and hundreds of search drones.
Bureau of Meteorology spokesman Steve Bernasconi said some towns had recorded more than half a metre of rain in the space of three days.
But he said rain was expected to slowly taper off from late Thursday night as the weather system moved south.
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