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Floodwaters still threaten parts of Australia’s east coast as tropical storm cleanup begins



WELLINGTON, New Zealand — Australia’s prime minister cautioned that the fallout from a vicious tropical storm over the weekend was “far from over” as parts of two states remained inundated with perilous floodwaters Monday, even as the initial threat from the deluge continued to recede.

One person was killed and several others were injured after heavy rain lashed Australia’s east coast Saturday, toppling trees and power lines and inundating some parts of Queensland and New South Wales with record downpours. The two states escaped the level of chaos forecast from the tropical low weather system, which was earlier expected to make landfall as the first tropical cyclone to hit southeast Queensland in 51 years — before weakening as it approached.

Still, 200,000 homes and businesses were without power in the region Monday afternoon — after the storm prompted the biggest blackout in Queensland’s history — and more than 700 schools were closed for the day.

Those living near rivers and creeks were urged to evacuate or stay indoors as water levels continued to rise in some areas — with more rain forecast triggering further warnings during the day. Disaster was declared for the city of Ipswich, west of Brisbane, where a river was expected to flood overnight. People in surrounding suburbs were ordered to leave their homes.

Meanwhile, in other towns where floodwaters began to recede a cleanup began as power was restored for tens of thousands of people. The scale of the damage was not immediately clear.

Workers whose livelihoods were hampered by the storm will be eligible for welfare payments for up to 13 weeks beginning Tuesday, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told reporters Monday.

In the city of Lismore in New South Wales, two military trucks helping with the rescue efforts Saturday rolled over, injuring 13 of the 36 personnel traveling in them. One remained in hospital Monday with injuries that were not life-threatening, Australian Defense Minister Richard Marles said.

The single death of the crisis was a 61-year-old man who disappeared in a flooded river near the New South Wales town of Dorrigo, police said. His body was recovered Saturday.

Albanese warned residents of the two stricken states not to be “complacent” as flood warnings lingered.

“If it’s flooded, forget it,” he said, referring to traveling in or entering inundated areas.

Cyclones are common in Queensland’s tropical north but are rare in the state’s temperate and densely populated southeast corner that borders New South Wales. Tropical Cyclone Alfred was last week expected to become the first cyclone since 1974 to cross the Australian coast near Queensland’s state capital of Brisbane, Australia’s third-most populous city.

But it weakened Saturday to a tropical low, defined as carrying sustained winds of less than 39 mph.

Authorities had feared similar scenes to those eastern Australia experienced during massive floods in 2011 and in a series of 2022 events — in which more than 20 people died.



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