Flooded-out Australians go home to mud, mess, rain

Australia’s worst flooding in some 50 years was caused by tropical rains that fell for days, starting just before Christmas.

January 07, 2011 05:53 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 03:35 am IST - BRISBANE

The suburb of Depot Hill in Rockhampton, Australia, is inundated with floodwaters, on Thursday. Despite the fresh rains, the overflowing river in the inundated city of Rockhampton is slowly receding.

The suburb of Depot Hill in Rockhampton, Australia, is inundated with floodwaters, on Thursday. Despite the fresh rains, the overflowing river in the inundated city of Rockhampton is slowly receding.

Residents of waterlogged northeast Australia returned to homes caked in sludge and nervously watched the skies for more rain on Friday while waiting for swollen rivers to recede.

The worst appeared to have passed from flooding that covered an area the size of France and Germany in murky brown water for longer than a week, but torrents still posed dangers in partly-submerged towns in Queensland State and progress on assessing damage and rebuilding was slow.

On Friday, police banned boats from the swollen river coursing through the city of Rockhampton that is expected to remain near its peak for another 10 days.

The scope of the damage is not yet known, and fully repairing the entire infrastructure washed away or ruined could take years, the Army general heading recovery efforts said.

“We still don’t know what it looks like underwater,” Maj. Gen. Mick Slater told reporters in Rockhampton, where people for days have waded through water that was waist-deep in places. “Major roads, rail lines and bridges are all damaged, but we don’t know yet how much.”

Australia’s worst flooding in some 50 years was caused by tropical rains that fell for days, starting just before Christmas. Some 1,200 homes in 40 communities were inundated and almost 11,000 more have water damage. Nearly 4,000 people were evacuated, and police have reported 10 deaths in swollen rivers or floodwaters in Queensland since late November.

The flooding shut some 40 coal mines in the State, pushing up global prices, and has hurt wheat, mango, sugarcane and other crops. State Premier Anna Bligh has said the price of rebuilding homes, businesses and infrastructure, coupled with economic losses, could be as high as $5 billion.

Heavy rain fell on Friday and could last through the weekend, the Bureau of Meteorology said. The rains aren’t expected to increase flooding but could delay recovery and prolong the crisis.

The news for those in flooded areas on Friday ranged from good, to bad, to little change at all.

Some of the 150 people of Condamine drove home in a convoy on Thursday for the first time since military helicopters helped evacuate everyone on December 30 before a swollen river swamped the cattle-ranch supply town.

“Nothing does justice to the devastation you come back to; it’s just phenomenal,” said pub owner Shane Hickey. “Everything is gone. The water just took everything with it.

“All the grass is mud, all the plants have been torn out of the ground, the trees have gone over and are just covered in silt and mud,” he said.

The town has no drinking water, and Mayor Ray Brown said electricians, plumbers, portable toilets and water and food were being brought in.

Farther south, people in St. George were watching floodwaters inch higher by the hour on the earth-and-sandbag levees they rushed to build around homes. The flood peak was forecast lower, meaning fewer than 30 homes in the town of some 2,500 people were at risk.

In Rockhampton, the largest community hit, the floodwaters peaked two days ago but were steady Friday after inundating large parts of the city of 75,000 people. Small motorboats have replaced cars as the main way to get around in the worst-hit suburbs.

Police declared a “no-go” zone for boats on a section of the flooded Fitzroy River because live power lines hung too close to the water.

“Travelling through the floodwaters at this location is extremely dangerous due to low-lying power lines,” said Inspector Peter Flanders. “It is important that the power to the Rockhampton sewerage treatment plant remains switched on.”

0 / 0
Sign in to unlock member-only benefits!
  • Access 10 free stories every month
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign-up/manage your newsletter subscriptions with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early access to discounts & offers on our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide by our community guidelines for posting your comments.

We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of The Hindu and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.