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Wind gusts outside shops in Bowen, eastern Australia AP/Press Association Images

'People have lost everything': Australian towns face worst flooding seen in a century

Two women have died.

FLOODED RIVERS ARE still rising today in two Australian states, with two women dead and four people missing after torrential rains in the wake of a powerful tropical cyclone.

Queensland police warned that the Logan River, which runs through Beenleigh, south of Brisbane, would only hit peak flood levels during the afternoon while further north the city of Rockhampton is also facing a serious threat.

Commissioner Ian Stewart warned there was “still a major risk to the community around Logan and further south caused by that flooding situation”.

Rockhampton, with a population of over 80,000 people on the Fitzroy River, was expected to suffer flood levels not seen for a century and Stewart urged residents in low-lying areas to leave.

“By Wednesday, we will be at peak flooding in Rockhampton,” he said. “It will be a gradual rise, so I encourage people to move now.”

Queensland police tweeted “we currently have four people missing… that we have serious concerns about,” including a 77-year-old man.

Tens of thousands of people have been evacuated from a string of towns in Queensland and New South Wales as the floods move south towards Ballina, cutting off roads.

‘People have lost everything’

Others have tried to stick it out to save their properties. The scene was grim along the Logan river.

Casey Bently (47), whose house was submerged up to its roof, said: “We got as much out as we could in the short time that we had. People have lost everything. I’d only just finished renovating the house, and it is all gone again now.”

‘Very dangerous time’

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull called on residents in affected areas to exercise caution.

“In many parts of the country you will see floodwaters continuing to rise over the next days,” he told reporters.

This is a very dangerous time in these flooded areas. I want to say to everybody who is affected by these floods – do not go into flooded waters. Do not cross flooded roads.

Category four Cyclone Debbie hit northeastern Australia on Tuesday between Bowen and Airlie Beach, ripping up trees and causing widespread damage that is still being assessed.

It was downgraded to a tropical low as it tracked southeast still packing high winds and dumping huge amounts of rain all down the east coast to Sydney and beyond before blowing out over the Tasman Sea.

Police found the body of a woman who disappeared in floodwaters near Murwillumbah just south of the Queensland border yesterday.

Another woman (64), whose vehicle was swept off a causeway on a property in Gungal, in the Hunter Valley south of Sydney was also found dead yesterday.

Lismore, south of Murwillumbah, was among the worst flooded towns, with Tweed Heads, Kingscliff and Murwillumbah also subject to evacuation orders.

In areas further north where the cyclone made landfall, water and power were still being restored.

Bowen, Mackay and the Whitsunday Islands bore the brunt of the cyclone and nearly 40,000 homes were waiting to be re-connected today.

The military has mobilised 1,300 soldiers for the clean-up with helicopters and planes deploying to restore infrastructure and supply emergency food, water and fuel.

The Insurance Council of Australia declared the Queensland and northern NSW regions disaster zones, adding that the damage bill could top Aus$1 billion (about €716 million).

© AFP 2017

Read: Paradise lost: Whitsundays in tatters after Cyclone Debbie wreaks havoc

Read: Protesters storm government building in Paraguay over president seeking second term

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    Mute Christopher Byrne
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    Apr 1st 2017, 2:51 PM

    Climate change. Any bad weather is a direct result of global warming / climate change

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    Mute Slippy ❤️
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    Apr 1st 2017, 3:22 PM

    @Christopher Byrne: Was It global warming that caused the flooding over a century ago or was it just a freak storm?

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    Mute Christopher Byrne
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    Apr 1st 2017, 3:37 PM

    @Slippy ❤️: sarcasm mate…sarcasam. I live in Perth and we’ve has the coldest winter in the 6+ years I’ve lived here but Ive no doubt it will be reported as the hottest on record

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    Mute M
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    Apr 1st 2017, 4:39 PM

    @Christopher Byrne: higher average global temperatures result in more moisture in the atmosphere which makes storm systems powerful. So yes the strength of this storm was added today b the fact that GLOBAL temperatures are rising. Weather is a global system, it doesn’t care if it’s been cold in Australia lately. Some models suggest that Europe might actually get colder over the coming decades as a result of GLOBAL average temperatures rising if it continues.

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    Mute Christopher Byrne
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    Apr 1st 2017, 4:44 PM

    @M: Yes, climate models. Very reliable they’ve proven to be….We can’t predict weather reliably 2 weeks in advance but we’re supposed to believe in these models forecasting 30 years down the track as gospel. Despite the fact most if not all of them have failed to accurately predict the future

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    Mute Tweed Cap
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    Apr 1st 2017, 5:34 PM

    @Christopher Byrne:
    I think you’ve been living in the colonies for too long….mate.

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    Mute M
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    Apr 1st 2017, 6:08 PM

    @Tweed Cap: wow I don’t know how to even begin talking to you when you say something as clueless as that . climate is not the same thing as weather. Are you saying that releasing huge amounts of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere will not cause global temperatures to rise? …Why not?

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    Mute Boganity
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    Apr 1st 2017, 8:43 PM

    @Christopher Byrne: don’t stray too far from home you’ll fall off the edge of the earth

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    Mute Pablo
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    Apr 1st 2017, 11:56 PM

    @Christopher Byrne: I love listening to people who have read some articles and now know it all. Just proves studying and practicing science is a waste of time, we just need an opion

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    Mute Dave O Keeffe
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    Apr 2nd 2017, 6:29 AM

    @Christopher Byrne: isn’t winter 2 months away yet? Also weren’t there record highs recorded in summer in parts of Oz? Also, true or false, don’t parts of Oz have a monsoon season and isn’t this just an extreme version of that?

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    Mute Boganity
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    Apr 2nd 2017, 1:22 PM

    @Dave O Keeffe: No, on all counts

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    Mute Dave O Keeffe
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    Apr 2nd 2017, 6:59 PM

    @Boganity: I think you’ll find you’re incorrect on all points. Australian winter is our summer months. They had record temperatures over Christmas, and there is indeed a monsoon season in parts of Australia.

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