| Topic: |
Science > Prophecies-Of-Nostradamus |
| User: |
"=?utf-8?B?VGhlIExhc3QgMjQ2NSBkYXlz4oSiIOKZpQ==?=" |
| Date: |
20 Mar 2006 08:45:24 PM |
| Object: |
Thousands feared homeless in Oz |
www.abc.go.com/
Thousands Feared Homeless in Australia After Cyclone, Most Powerful
Storm to Hit Nation Since 1974
By MERAIAH FOLEY
The Associated Press
CAIRNS, Australia - Metal roofs littered streets, wooden houses lay in
splinters and banana plantations were stripped bare after the most
powerful cyclone to hit Australia in three decades lashed the country's
eastern coast Monday.
Amazingly, the storm caused no reported fatalities, and only 30 people
suffered minor injuries. But the damage from Cyclone Larry, a Category
5 storm with winds up to 180 mph, was expected to run into the hundreds
of millions of dollars.
Hardest hit was Innisfail, a farming city of 8,500 people 60 miles
south of the tourist city of Cairns in northeastern Queensland state.
"It looks like an atomic bomb hit the place," Innisfail mayor Neil
Clarke told Australian television. "It is severe damage. This is more
than a local disaster, this is a national disaster."
The town urgently needs accommodation for people whose homes were
damaged, a power supply to feed hospitals and other infrastructure, he
said.
There was no official count of the homeless Monday, but given the
number of homes badly damaged, the figure could run into the thousands,
Clarke said.
The casualty toll was so low because people left town or went to
shelters after authorities posted warnings. Residents and officials
were mindful of the damage Hurricane Katrina did to New Orleans and
Mississippi last August, said Ben Creagh, a spokesman for Queensland
state Department of Emergency Services.
"Everyone here studied Katrina and took a lot of messages away, a lot
of lessons at the expense of the poor old Yanks," Creagh said. "There
was absolutely no complacency at the planning level at all, and I think
that shows. ... Good planning, a bit of luck we've dodged a bullet."
Within hours of the storm's landfall, officials declared a state of
emergency, prepared Black Hawk helicopters to run rescue missions and
announced cash payouts for victims $720 for each adult and $290 for
each child who lost their home. Prime Minister John Howard indicated
more aid was to come.
Queensland Premier Peter Beattie said 55 percent of homes in Innisfail
had been damaged, though rescue teams had yet to get full access to the
swamped region. All roads into the town remained blocked late Monday.
Innisfail Barrier Reef Motel owner Amanda Fitzpatrick echoed the
mayor's damage assessment.
"We could only go out in the eye of the storm and have a look and it
just looks like an atomic bomb has gone off," she told Australian
Broadcasting Corp. radio.
Farmers were expected to be among the hardest hit. The region is a
major growing region for bananas and sugar cane, and vast tracts of the
crops were flattened.
"It looks like someone's gone in there with a slasher and slashed the
top off everything," said Bill Horsford, a cane farmer. One lawmaker
estimated lost revenues could run to $110 million.
The storm also barreled over a portion of Australia's Great Barrier
Reef, damaging a narrow band of coral, said David Wachenfeld, director
of science at the government body that cares for the reef.
The reef is more than 1,240 miles long, and the affected area is only
about 30 miles across and far from the places where nearly 2 million
tourists a year gaze in awe at the coral's vibrant colors and fish
life, he said.
It would take 10 to 20 years for new coral to grow and replace the
damaged area, he said.
The storm was the most powerful to hit Australia since Christmas Eve
1974, when Cyclone Tracy destroyed the northern city of Darwin, killing
65 people.
A man who answered the phone at an Innisfail evacuation center late
Monday said it was too soon to estimate the number of people who lost
their homes.
"We are trying to collate at the moment how many houses have been
destroyed, how many people we have in shelters," he said. "There are
just so many people and so much damage."
=========================================
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| User: "" |
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| Title: Re: Thousands feared homeless in Oz |
22 Mar 2006 06:03:15 AM |
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"Hardest hit was Innisfail, a farming city of 8,500 people 60 miles
south of the tourist city of Cairns in northeastern Queensland state. "
Actually it was Babinda that took the hardest hit some 30km north of
Innisfail, but it is a small town and yes Innisfail probably has more
damage due to the larger population, a very beautiful part of the NQ.
magic in winter but it rains 10 months of the year there.
LB
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| User: "Mr. Hyde" |
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| Title: Re: Thousands feared homeless in Oz |
20 Mar 2006 10:30:15 PM |
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WALLY, as a 'self-professed' East Coast "Aussie", YOU "Dropped The Ball" big time. I now think you are nothing more
than a Canadian 'Aussie WannaBee'. ( ie: A Big FRAUD )
You should have seen that one coming AT LEAST one day before it HIT. - ???
[especially after countless WARNINGs.] - how much more could I have "SPELLED IT OUT FOR YOU" !!!
}:- o
Wally, you are the Biggest Loser of 2006 !!!
--
Mr. Hyde(ing) in Plan Site [ :-( ]
"The Last 2465 daysT ?" <stargatedecember2012@yahoo.ca> wrote in message
news:1142909124.372552.255700@i40g2000cwc.googlegroups.com...
www.abc.go.com/
Thousands Feared Homeless in Australia After Cyclone, Most Powerful
Storm to Hit Nation Since 1974
By MERAIAH FOLEY
The Associated Press
CAIRNS, Australia - Metal roofs littered streets, wooden houses lay in
splinters and banana plantations were stripped bare after the most
powerful cyclone to hit Australia in three decades lashed the country's
eastern coast Monday.
Amazingly, the storm caused no reported fatalities, and only 30 people
suffered minor injuries. But the damage from Cyclone Larry, a Category
5 storm with winds up to 180 mph, was expected to run into the hundreds
of millions of dollars.
Hardest hit was Innisfail, a farming city of 8,500 people 60 miles
south of the tourist city of Cairns in northeastern Queensland state.
"It looks like an atomic bomb hit the place," Innisfail mayor Neil
Clarke told Australian television. "It is severe damage. This is more
than a local disaster, this is a national disaster."
The town urgently needs accommodation for people whose homes were
damaged, a power supply to feed hospitals and other infrastructure, he
said.
There was no official count of the homeless Monday, but given the
number of homes badly damaged, the figure could run into the thousands,
Clarke said.
The casualty toll was so low because people left town or went to
shelters after authorities posted warnings. Residents and officials
were mindful of the damage Hurricane Katrina did to New Orleans and
Mississippi last August, said Ben Creagh, a spokesman for Queensland
state Department of Emergency Services.
"Everyone here studied Katrina and took a lot of messages away, a lot
of lessons at the expense of the poor old Yanks," Creagh said. "There
was absolutely no complacency at the planning level at all, and I think
that shows. ... Good planning, a bit of luck we've dodged a bullet."
Within hours of the storm's landfall, officials declared a state of
emergency, prepared Black Hawk helicopters to run rescue missions and
announced cash payouts for victims $720 for each adult and $290 for
each child who lost their home. Prime Minister John Howard indicated
more aid was to come.
Queensland Premier Peter Beattie said 55 percent of homes in Innisfail
had been damaged, though rescue teams had yet to get full access to the
swamped region. All roads into the town remained blocked late Monday.
Innisfail Barrier Reef Motel owner Amanda Fitzpatrick echoed the
mayor's damage assessment.
"We could only go out in the eye of the storm and have a look and it
just looks like an atomic bomb has gone off," she told Australian
Broadcasting Corp. radio.
Farmers were expected to be among the hardest hit. The region is a
major growing region for bananas and sugar cane, and vast tracts of the
crops were flattened.
"It looks like someone's gone in there with a slasher and slashed the
top off everything," said Bill Horsford, a cane farmer. One lawmaker
estimated lost revenues could run to $110 million.
The storm also barreled over a portion of Australia's Great Barrier
Reef, damaging a narrow band of coral, said David Wachenfeld, director
of science at the government body that cares for the reef.
The reef is more than 1,240 miles long, and the affected area is only
about 30 miles across and far from the places where nearly 2 million
tourists a year gaze in awe at the coral's vibrant colors and fish
life, he said.
It would take 10 to 20 years for new coral to grow and replace the
damaged area, he said.
The storm was the most powerful to hit Australia since Christmas Eve
1974, when Cyclone Tracy destroyed the northern city of Darwin, killing
65 people.
A man who answered the phone at an Innisfail evacuation center late
Monday said it was too soon to estimate the number of people who lost
their homes.
"We are trying to collate at the moment how many houses have been
destroyed, how many people we have in shelters," he said. "There are
just so many people and so much damage."
=========================================
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