Australia braces for fresh flooding
DOZENS of rural Australian communities were sandbagging their properties yesterday as they nervously watched four river systems rising from heavy rains upstream.
Over 3,500 people have evacuated their homes in north-central Victoria state, where some towns are predicting the worst floods in 100 years.
"In some of our river systems, we are seeing unprecedented rises," said State Emergency Service operations director Trevor White, saying the flood event was one of Victoria's biggest since records began.
Neil Pankhurst, mayor of the Murray River port of Echuca, said the town's levee was designed to withstand a one-in-100-year flood, which is dangerously close to what was expected late yesterday night.
"The levee is designed to contain a flood of the level we expect and we think it will hold," Pankhurst said.
He said some low-lying properties were likely to be isolated by floodwaters but most homes would not have water above floor level.
People were watching warily after witnessing the devastation floods have wreaked in Queensland state.
Three weeks of heavy flooding in the northeastern state left a vast territory underwater and caused 28 deaths, most of them from a flash flood that hit towns west of Brisbane last Monday. Fourteen people are still missing.
Over 3,500 people have evacuated their homes in north-central Victoria state, where some towns are predicting the worst floods in 100 years.
"In some of our river systems, we are seeing unprecedented rises," said State Emergency Service operations director Trevor White, saying the flood event was one of Victoria's biggest since records began.
Neil Pankhurst, mayor of the Murray River port of Echuca, said the town's levee was designed to withstand a one-in-100-year flood, which is dangerously close to what was expected late yesterday night.
"The levee is designed to contain a flood of the level we expect and we think it will hold," Pankhurst said.
He said some low-lying properties were likely to be isolated by floodwaters but most homes would not have water above floor level.
People were watching warily after witnessing the devastation floods have wreaked in Queensland state.
Three weeks of heavy flooding in the northeastern state left a vast territory underwater and caused 28 deaths, most of them from a flash flood that hit towns west of Brisbane last Monday. Fourteen people are still missing.
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