Brisbane a ‘war zone’ as huge flood smashes city

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BRISBANE – Australia’s third-largest city Brisbane resembled a “war zone” Thursday with whole suburbs under water and infrastructure smashed as the worst flood in decades hit 30,000 properties.
Shocked evacuees surveyed the damage after floods that have swept eastern Australia peaked about a metre (three feet) below feared levels around dawn, sparing thousands more properties in the besieged river city. Queensland’s tearful state premier Anna Bligh said relief was tinged with despair at the damage to homes and major landmarks, as well as the scale of the “post-war” rebuilding effort ahead for the city of two million people.
“I’m grateful Mother Nature hasn’t been as terrible as she could have been, but people are waking up to unbearable agony across our city today,” Bligh told Sky News. “We’ve seen scenes of unbelievable devastation and destruction: entire suburbs where only rooftops can be glimpsed, whole big workplaces… are completely under water.
“Whole industrial parks (and) railway stations under water, bridges, roads all closed,” she added. “What I’m seeing looks more like a war zone in some places.” At a news conference later in the day, Bligh said the floodwaters had forced 3,000 people into evacuation centres around the region and warned that for some it would be a long time before they could return home.
“For some people we acknowledge that that is going to take months and months and months and you will need interim accommodation on a temporary basis,” she said. A 24-year-old man became Brisbane’s first victim, while two more bodies were found west of the city after Monday’s flash floods wrecked a group of small towns. Fifteen people have now died in the past three days. The swollen Brisbane River, which runs through the centre of the Queensland state capital, was slowly beginning to recede, but the nervous city was reeling from its worst flooding since 1974.
The river peaked at 4.46 metres (14 feet, eight inches) at around 5:15 am (1915 GMT Wednesday), below levels that devastated the city in 1974. A massive 300-metre (300-yard) stretch of a popular concrete walkway that was perched above the river was ripped from its moorings and sped down the river, before being halted by the bravery of a quick-thinking tugboat pilot.
A well-known floating restaurant was among dozens of vessels and pontoons also sent speeding down the waterway, while the downtown Suncorp Stadium resembled a giant swimming pool and the XXXX brewery was also flooded. Central Brisbane remained a ghost town after offices ordered workers to stay away and power was cut to more than 100,000 people in the region, as a safety measure to avoid electrical fires.
Residents breathed a sigh of relief as they woke up to the news that they had dodged the worst-case scenario. However, around 12,000 homes were completely flooded, some up to their roofs, and 13,700 were partly inundated. Another 5,000 businesses were fully or partly hit, according to official estimates.
“It was worse in ’74, a lot worse,” said John McLeod, security director of the Stamford Plaza hotel, which lies near the Brisbane River. Police started round-the-clock patrols in Brisbane and nearby Ipswich to deter looters, while the Australian Medical Association warned people to stay out of floodwaters to avoid infections.
Rescuers continued their gruesome and painstaking search of communities shattered by Monday’s flash floods, with dozens of people unaccounted for. Floodwaters blamed on the La Nina weather phenomenon have turned an area twice the size of Texas into a disaster zone, crippling coal exports and tourism in the “Sunshine State” famous for the Great Barrier Reef.
Goondiwindi, a town of 6,000 west of Brisbane, was set to become the next flashpoint of Queensland’s floods, with the Macintyre River expected to reach record levels in early Friday morning. Hospitals and nursing homes in the town were evacuated of their patients as a precaution. Heavy downpours have also brought floods to Tasmania, where more than 200 millimetres (7.9 inches) of rain were recorded in the island’s eastern and northwestern regions in the 24 hours to Thursday morning.