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Australia Floods: Brisbane Suffers As Water Arrives

Australia Floods

JOHN PYE   01/12/11 11:48 PM ET   AP

BRISBANE, Australia — Floodwaters washing through Australia's third-largest city crested Thursday just shy of record levels but high enough to submerge entire neighborhoods and cause damage one official likened to the aftermath of war.

One man died in Brisbane after being sucked into a storm drain by the muddy waters, Queensland state Premier Anna Bligh said. Thousands of homes were swamped, and officials told residents it will be days before many of them can return to their houses. Others were told their homes will never be habitable again.

In one spot of bright news, the swollen Brisbane River's peak was about three feet (one meter) lower than predicted, at a depth slightly below that of 1974 floods that swept the city. The river had already begun to recede by Thursday afternoon, though it was expected to stay high for several days.

Waters in some areas had reached the tops of roofs, shut down roads and power, and devastated entire neighborhoods. Mayor Campbell Newman said 11,900 homes and 2,500 businesses had been completely inundated, with another 14,700 houses and 2,500 businesses at least partially covered in water.

"Queensland is reeling this morning from the worst natural disaster in our history and possibly in the history of our nation," Bligh told reporters. "We've seen three-quarters of our state having experienced the devastation of raging floodwaters and we now face a reconstruction task of postwar proportions."

The flooding, which has killed 25 people since late November, has submerged dozens of towns – some three times – and left an area the size of Germany and France combined under water. Highways and rail lines have been washed away in the disaster, which is shaping up to be Australia's costliest, with early damage estimates around $5 billion.

At least 61 people are missing, and the death toll is expected to rise. Many of those unaccounted for disappeared from around Toowoomba, a city west of Brisbane that saw massive flash floods on Monday sweep away cars, road signs and people. Fourteen died in that flood alone, with police finding the bodies of two of those people on Thursday. Deputy Police Commissioner Ian Stewart warned that number was likely to rise as search and rescue teams accessed more devastated areas Thursday.

"We've got to brace ourselves for more bad news," Stewart said.

Almost 115,000 homes were without power across Queensland by Thursday because electricity was switched off to prevent electrocutions and damage to electrical systems.

In Brisbane, roads were flooded, railway lines were cut and sewage began spilling into the floodwaters. People moved about in kayaks, rowboats and even on surfboards. Boats torn from their moorings floated down an engorged river. Brisbane's office buildings stood empty with the normally bustling central business district transformed into a watery ghost town.

A 300-yard (-meter) stretch of a pedestrian boardwalk weighing 300 tons broke loose and drifted downstream before two tug boats were able to steer it away from bridges.

About 200 police officers were patrolling flooded streets around the clock. Three men were charged with looting after police said they tried to steal dinghies from the swollen river.

Despite the devastation, many remained thankful the river had spared them the worst of its fury.

"There's a fair bit of relief around this morning – we're thanking our stars a bit, that's for sure," said Andrew Turner, whose house in the flooded suburb of Graceville escaped inundation. "We were pretty much braced for the worst and were all but packed up and ready to go."

Lisa Sully, who lives in the nearby suburb of Sherwood, did have some water in her home – but she still felt lucky on Thursday.

"I can handle this," she said. "Mentally, I was prepared for worse."

The death toll has shocked Australians, no strangers to deadly natural disasters such as the wildfires that killed 173 in a single day two years ago.

One tale has particularly transfixed the country: a 13-year-old boy caught in the flood who told strangers to save his 10-year-old brother first and died as a result.

Jordan and Blake Rice were in the car with their mother, Donna, when a wall of water pummeled Toowoomba on Monday. After the torrent of water knocked one rescuer over, another man managed to reach the car, The Australian newspaper reported. At Jordan's insistence, he pulled Blake out first, according to a third brother, Kyle.

"Courage kicked in, and he would rather his little brother would live," the 16-year-old told the newspaper. Jordan and his mother were washed away before the men were able to get back to them.

By Wednesday, Jordan's name was among the top 10 most used terms on Twitter, as a wave of tweets hailed him as a "true hero" of the Queensland floods.

As the immediate crisis began to ease in Brisbane, focus returned to the search for the dozens still missing in the devastated Lockyer Valley, the site of Monday's deadly flash flood.

"This is a valley that has been completely and utterly devastated," Bligh said. "There are full towns that are now unrecognizable."

Stewart said search and rescue teams scouring the region Thursday were facing a tough task.

"The problem we have is that the people have been washed out of their homes and some of the homes are actually destroyed, like bombs have gone off there," Stewart told Nine Network. "It's a war scene in the Lockyer Valley today."

Though the full extent of the damage won't be known until the water is gone, even before Brisbane was threatened, Bligh estimated a cleanup and rebuilding to total around $5 billion.

Add to that, the damage to economy: Queensland's coal industry has virtually shut down, costing millions in deferred exports and sending global prices higher. Vegetables, fruit and sugarcane crops in the rich agricultural region have been wiped out, and prices are due to skyrocket as a result.

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BRISBANE, Australia — Floodwaters washing through Australia's third-largest city crested Thursday just shy of record levels but high enough to submerge entire neighborhoods and cause damage one ...
BRISBANE, Australia — Floodwaters washing through Australia's third-largest city crested Thursday just shy of record levels but high enough to submerge entire neighborhoods and cause damage one ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
merrymay
08:21 PM on 01/13/2011
Conspiracy theorists probably think the HAARP is being used as payback for wikileaks..

Seriously, has anyone heard about Steve Irwin's Zoo? It's in Queensland.
04:19 PM on 01/13/2011
Very pleased to witness how Australian’s have pulled together in times of crisis. It’s not over yet, it is estimated that it may take the Queensland economy two years to recover from this.

One element that has really come to the fore during this crisis has bee the effectiveness of twitter in providing and sharing valuable information for those that need it. http://danieljames.com.au/twitter-and-crisis/
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TYRANNASAURUS
UGH!....people don't taste good.
12:18 PM on 01/13/2011
Get used to it.............. WATER AND HEAT ARE THE WAVE OF THE FUTURE FOR THE NEXT SEVERAL THOUSAND YEARS.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Walter Westcot
09:20 AM on 01/13/2011
Shame on New Orleans.... shame on George Bush

Is the cultural difference in how disaster is averted lost on everyone??

Shame shame shame....

and I'll bet these people won't be in FEMA trailers a half dozen years from now.... telling us it's OUR fault .... WE owe them a new home...
12:55 PM on 01/13/2011
I knew this was Bush's fault, thanks for clarifying.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nirek
Proud progressive Vietnam vet. against WAR
07:18 AM on 01/13/2011
I pray for them.
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Jeremyewilliams
Reality is not the GOPs cup of tea!
08:52 AM on 01/13/2011
That won't help, do something! Donate at least! That is the problem, people think that praying equates helping when in reality it does nothing but soothe the minds of the one praying. Even thinking is better than praying, at least you come up with something productive toward the cause. Instead of praying why not take action and start raising money to help them out? There's plenty of ways you can help people in flood affected areas of Queensland.

PREMIER'S FLOOD RELIEF APPEAL
LIFELINE'S QUEENSLAND FLOOD APPEAL
WESTERN AUSTRALIA FLOODS
the list goes on.
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TYRANNASAURUS
UGH!....people don't taste good.
12:15 PM on 01/13/2011
Praying is to make the prayee feel good........without really doing anything to really help.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
merrymay
08:24 PM on 01/13/2011
Praying asks for grace to enter human hearts, so they will want to get off their butts and do something, instead of picking their noses at the mall. Prayer does that...sort of a satellite out of this dense matter.

Thanks for the addresses.
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06:14 AM on 01/13/2011
This has been one hell of a year for Australia. I have so many good friends in Brisbane; it is a marvelous city with many wonderful communities. I know that the Australian spirit and strength of community will pull them through, but my heart breaks at the loss of life. Having worked in LA after Katrina, I know the devastation. Thankfully, Brisbane does not have the degree of poverty that NO had, and has I think a much wiser and more responsive government... I hope.

My prayers go out to all Australians, and to all the families and communities impacted by this horrible time.
06:09 AM on 01/13/2011
Australians are strong, resilient and compassionate in times of crisis. Queenslanders in particular, have a very strong sense of common identity in adversity.

On Thursday morning, Anna Bligh the Premier of Queensland offered the following words to the people of Queensland;

"As we weep for what we have lost and as we grieve for family and friends and we confront the challenge that is before us, I want us to remember who we are. We are Queenslanders. We are the people they breed tough north of the border. We’re the ones that they knock down and we get up again.

I said earlier this week that this weather may break our hearts and it is doing that but it will not break our will and in the coming weeks and the coming months we are going prove that beyond any doubt. Together we can pull through this and with your help, we can achieve it."

Throughout the three weeks of flooding in Queensland, there have been countless examples of neighbour helping neighbour, stranger helping stranger and mate helping mate. My state and my city will get through this with the support and encouragement of our fellow Australians from every state in the country.

"We are one, but we are many
And from all the lands on earth we come
We share a dream and sing with one voice:
I am, you are, we are Australian"

To all those who have offered their best wishes, THANK YOU.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
merrymay
08:25 PM on 01/13/2011
You're most welcome, mate! Lord love you all!
06:08 AM on 01/13/2011
Latest news is the Premier of Queensland has had to beg people to stop bringing goods and toys to evacuation centers as there is just not enough room for all the donations flooding in.

" Australians all let us rejoice,
For we are young and free;
We've golden soil and wealth for toil;
Our home is girt by sea;
Our land abounds in nature's gifts
Of beauty rich and rare;
In history's page, let every stage
Advance Australia Fair.
In joyful strains then let us sing,
Advance Australia Fair.

Beneath our radiant Southern Cross
We'll toil with hearts and hands;
To make this Commonwealth of ours
Renowned of all the lands;
For those who've come across the seas
We've boundless plains to share;
With courage let us all combine
To Advance Australia Fair.
In joyful strains then let us sing,
Advance Australia Fair."

There may be countries richer, there may be countries more beautiful (which I doubt) but no where on earth is there a greatest group of people then those who have come from all around the world to join the original inhabitants of this land in calling ourselves AUSTRALIAN!!!!!!
06:00 AM on 01/13/2011
The flood level may be below 1974 levels but there is more damage due to the growth of the city. Brisbane is twice as big as it was in 1974 and a lot of that building was on the flood plain.

Now to a few amazing stories and viginettes.

A tug owner hears that 300 tons of concrete broadwalk has broken away and is heading towards the Gateway Bridge. This bridge is the main artery between north and south Brisbane. He rouses his crew and spends hours gently manouvering 300 tons of concrete to save the bridge.Thirteen year old boy forces rescuers to take his younger brother to safety just before he and his mother are swept to there deaths. Eight year old boy donates his life savings to the flood appeal, all of $12:00. A couple get there grown children into the roof cavity before the wall of water in the Lockyer Valley hits and sends the parents to there deaths

Number of looters: Three
Violence: NONE
Whinging about how tough it is: NONE
Politicians making capital out of this disaster: Once again NONE.

Go Aussies you RULE
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06:10 AM on 01/13/2011
Awesome. Thank you for that. Our hearts and prayers go out to all our sibs on the other side of the world.
05:54 AM on 01/13/2011
and that seemd a little ranting & nonsensical
06:24 AM on 01/13/2011
Sorry mate not sure what you are talking about???????
05:12 AM on 01/13/2011
I am simultaneously smiling and crying with each day's news coverage of the floods. The spirit of my fellow Australians is heart-warming but the loss of life, homes and wildlife is shocking and devastating.
02:03 AM on 01/13/2011
I'm an Australian. This year we have had extreme fire warnings and extreme floods, we have also the one of the hottest summers on record and coldest winters on record. Last year we had one of the most devastating 'flash-fires' in our nations history that killed close to 200 people...

But apparently global warming is a figment of liberals wild imagination.... global warming shouldn't be a political issue... it should be an established fact. Well done for standing against the survival of humanity GOP.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MikeWebster
Always happy.
02:33 AM on 01/13/2011
What's the survival of humanity when pitted against the short term profits of the Koch Brothers and other extremist capitalists.
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SurrealSequences
2 understand the future: research & study the past
05:16 AM on 01/13/2011
MikeWebster

BINGO!!!!!!!!

The brainwashed just don't get it.
12:23 AM on 01/13/2011
I saw a woman joking about maybe having to build a Noah's Ark for her animals on TV this morning and I would like to say that that is the way to go! Keep up that spirit and you will pull through this much better than you could ever imagine.
04:43 AM on 01/13/2011
i saw a tweet the other day about a woman who had emailed her friend after losing her house and all her belongings: "send sham-wows". people are incredible.
11:55 PM on 01/12/2011
nope, no climate change here, move along folks
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Mort
Once I thought I was wrong, but I was mistaken.
11:46 PM on 01/12/2011
The term "Land Down Under" just took on a whole new meaning.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cananna
I like trees and bunnies.
01:33 AM on 01/13/2011
Booooo!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Mort
Once I thought I was wrong, but I was mistaken.
01:53 AM on 01/13/2011
:)
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SurrealSequences
2 understand the future: research & study the past
05:18 AM on 01/13/2011
Mort ....... I agree. Maybe as Pat would say it's God's punishment for stealing the land from the original caretakers.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jerryjerry5959
LIFE--Good and bad days. Just have more good ones
07:17 AM on 01/13/2011
U get a Boooooooo too
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Mort
Once I thought I was wrong, but I was mistaken.
04:15 PM on 01/16/2011
Aborigines aren't Christian, so it's ok. With Pat at least!