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An aerial view of flooded buildings in the northern New South Wales city of Lismore. Photo: Australian Defence Force via AFP

More rains to drench flood-battered Australia as scores still missing

  • A year’s worth of rainfall over a week in southern Queensland and northern New South Wales left thousands displaced and sweept away property and livestock
  • The disaster has claimed 13 lives so far
Australia

Australian authorities on Friday warned of more rains over the weekend in several flooded regions in the country’s east, likely hampering relief efforts as defence personnel try to reach worst-hit towns cut off by days of downpours.

A wild weather system that dumped more than a year’s worth of rainfall over a week in several places in southern Queensland and northern New South Wales brought widespread destruction, leaving thousands of people displaced and sweeping away property, livestock and roads.

Thirteen people have been killed since the deluge began.

Flood evacuation warnings were revised down for some parts in Sydney, Australia’s largest city, but the Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) said a new weather system could bring another round of heavy rains from Sunday.

“That is not good news for us here in eastern New South Wales and for much of the state … things are already saturated,” BoM meteorologist Dean Narramore said during a media briefing on Friday.

Australia’s east coast summer has been dominated by the La Nina weather pattern, typically associated with increased rainfall, with many rivers already near capacity before the latest drenching after steady rains over the last few weeks.

Volunteers rescue a llama from a flooded farm house in western Sydney on Thursday. Photo: AFP

Emergency services warned thunderstorms and isolated heavy showers will continue to create additional risks.

“We’ve not passed the danger period yet. The rivers are very high, fast flowing, there’s a lot of debris and it’s dangerous out there,” Carlene York, state emergency service commissioner, said.

Thousands of Australians, meanwhile, returned to their homes and businesses on Friday to clear debris and sludge after water levels receded amid a pause in rains.

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Australia steps up rescue efforts after deadly floods force thousands to flee in eastern states

Australia steps up rescue efforts after deadly floods force thousands to flee in eastern states

In the northern New South Wales town of Lismore, among the worst hit by record floods, Mayor Steve Krieg said hundreds of troops and emergency crews will help lead rescue efforts on Friday.

“Several people [are] still unaccounted for, and search and recovery will be occurring today,” he said in a Facebook post.

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