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Paradise lost: Whitsundays in tatters after Cyclone Debbie wreaks havoc

The military has mobilised 1,300 soldiers to help assess the full extent of damage and help the clean-up.

ABC News (Australia) / YouTube

TORRENTIAL RAIN IS hampering relief efforts after a powerful cyclone wreaked havoc in northeast Australia, with floods sparking emergency rescues as fed-up tourists began evacuating from resort islands.

Cyclone Debbie has pummelled Queensland state since crashing ashore as a category four storm on Tuesday between Bowen and Airlie Beach, ripping up trees, washing boats onto land and causing widespread damage.

It has been downgraded to a tropical low as it tracks southeast, but continues to pack damaging wind gusts and dump huge amounts of rain, with Brisbane now in the firing line.

Meteorologists forecast the city would be soaked by a month’s worth of rain in a single day, with the popular Sunshine Coast and Gold Coast areas also set to be drenched before the system moves offshore tomorrow.

Theme parks and beaches in the area were closed for the day.

“We have a very, very large state here and this is a very, very big weather system that’s going to wreak havoc all the way down the coast,” Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said.

whit ABC News / Screengrab ABC News / Screengrab / Screengrab

Emergency service crews, who have received more than 3,000 calls for help, rescued dozens of people overnight and early today from floodwaters, with some plucked from roofs and tops of cars.

“Significant rainfall in Mackay — sudden increase in calls for service. A number of rescues undertaken & still being undertaken,” Queensland police tweeted.

Despite this, no deaths have been reported with only one significant injury — a man crushed by a collapsing wall. Before the cyclone hit, thousands of people moved to higher ground, out of the area or to safe refuges.

The wild weather has made the clean-up difficult as crews battle horrendous conditions to reach isolated communities and restore power.

Many roads remain flooded and towns cut off with hundreds of schools closed and authorities keeping a close eye on dams as water levels rise.

A significant experience 

Great Barrier Reef islands were among the worst hit.

Tourists and residents have been stranded for days on devastated Hamilton and Daydream islands, battered by terrifying winds of more than 260 kph at the height of the tempest.

w3 ABC News / Screengrab ABC News / Screengrab / Screengrab

Hundreds were evacuated from their accommodation today after struggling with no power and toilets not flushing as water ran low.

“They’ve been through a significant experience, but they are safe. That’s the main thing,” Queensland Fire and Emergency Services Deputy Commissioner Mark Roche told reporters.

Jacqui McCullagh, who was staying on Hamilton Island, said the once-lush area was in a bad way.

“Boats washed ashore, houses without roofs, windows smashed in, trees snapped in half, gum trees torn out of the ground and those that do remain standing, are bare and lifeless,” she told the local Whitsunday Times.

The military has mobilised 1,300 soldiers to help assess the full extent of damage and help the clean-up, with helicopters and planes deploying to restore infrastructure and supply emergency food, water and fuel.

Debbie has officially been declared a catastrophe by the Insurance Council of Australia, allowing claims from the disaster to be prioritised.

The economic cost to a region that relies heavily on farming is expected to be huge, with sugarcane crops hit hard and the cattle industry also impacted, officials said.

“Producers in the Whitsunday area were planting winter vegetables and they’re expected to suffer heavy crop losses as well as infrastructure, crop and irrigation equipment damage,” said Queensland’s Rural Economic Development Minister Bill Byrne.

In the Mackay district, it’s understood that the cane fields at Proserpine, Mackay and Sarina have been flattened.

Irish travellers in the affected areas are being advised to monitor local and international weather updates from the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) and the Australian Bureau of Meteorology websites.

© AFP 2017 with reporting from Daragh Brophy 

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    Mute Alan b..
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    Mar 30th 2017, 10:49 AM

    But this is Australia they only get 30+ degree sunshine,Well according to people on Facebook it does.They hardly only post the temp when it’s hot would they?

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    Mute Conor Walsh
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    Mar 30th 2017, 11:06 AM

    @Alan b..: Its only 26 here though in the aftermath of TC Debbie!!! we will be getting sunburnt tomorrow.

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    Mute Alan b..
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    Mar 30th 2017, 11:19 AM

    @Conor Walsh: make sure and post it on FB on sure all your friends are dying to know how hot it is

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    Mute Conor Walsh
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    Mar 30th 2017, 11:24 AM

    @Alan b..: Only do that when its above 30 as you mentioned already.

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    Mar 30th 2017, 3:04 PM

    @Conor Walsh: thanks Conor I don’t know how I’d cope without the weather updates from Australia

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    Mute Boganity
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    Mar 30th 2017, 8:49 PM

    @Alan b..: A cyclone is a warm weather event cause by warm air so where did you get the idea its cold in cyclone ?

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    Mute Peter Cavey
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    Mar 30th 2017, 12:48 PM

    That lad from the Rubberbandits was right. The comments section of the Journal is an utter sewer. After a natural disaster in a country where livelyhoods could now be in tatters, the comments section here is nothing but trolls!

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    Mute Boganity
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    Mar 30th 2017, 8:51 PM

    @Peter Cavey: you flatter them by calling them trolls, idiots more like

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    Mute Charles Martel
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    Mar 30th 2017, 10:40 AM

    Doesn’t anyone read about the 3 little pigs anymore…??
    Some great tips on construction in there…

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    Mute Shane Murphy
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    Mar 30th 2017, 11:03 AM

    Pity it didn’t hit Brisbane and Sydney

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