Queensland Flood Crisis: Ex-Cyclone Koji Triggers Warnings and Rescues

Ex-Tropical Cyclone Koji is causing major flooding across Queensland, leading to widespread warnings. The town of Clermont is cut off, with residents evacuated and hundreds without power. Rescue teams have been busy saving people trapped on the roofs of their vehicles in rising waters. Officials warn that more rain could be devastating for already soaked western communities.

Key Points: Queensland Flood Warnings and Rescues Amid Ex-Cyclone Koji

  • Multiple flood warnings are active across central and northern Queensland river catchments
  • The town of Clermont is isolated with over 300 properties without power
  • Swift water rescue teams saved three people from stranded vehicles overnight
  • Nearly 50,000 head of livestock are missing or presumed dead in the floods
2 min read

Flood emergency prompts widespread warnings in Australia's Queensland

Ex-Tropical Cyclone Koji triggers severe flood warnings across Queensland, leading to rescues, power outages, and significant livestock losses.

"Communities... should stay on high alert as further rain there could be devastating. - David Crisafulli, Queensland Premier"

Sydney, Jan 13

Flood warnings have been issued across the northeast Australian state of Queensland as ex-Tropical Cyclone Koji continues to cause widespread intense rainfall.

As of Tuesday morning local time, the Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) had multiple flood warnings in place for rivers and catchments in central, northeast and northwest Queensland after some regions received more than a year's worth of rainfall in one week.

In the small town of Clermont, about 750 km northwest of the state capital of Brisbane, residents in low-lying areas were on Monday afternoon ordered to move to higher ground.

Over 300 properties remained without electricity on Tuesday in the town of around 3,000 people, which has been cut off by floodwaters.

Authorities said on Tuesday that three people were rescued from floodwaters in Clermont overnight.

Two men were picked up by swift water rescue boats around 2:40 a.m. local time after getting trapped on the roof of their car in floodwaters while a third person was rescued from the roof of another vehicle a few hours later.

In a separate incident, two other people were eventually able to make their own way to safety after also becoming stranded on the roof of a vehicle near Clermont on Monday night.

Ex-Tropical Cyclone Koji made landfall on Queensland's northeast coast on Sunday morning, bringing damaging winds and heavy rainfall, and is now moving west across the state.

David Crisafulli, the premier of Queensland, told reporters on Monday that communities in western Queensland that already received significant rainfall earlier in January should stay on high alert as further rain there could be devastating, Xinhua news agency reported.

Crisafulli said that there have been no reported human casualties, but that almost 50,000 head of livestock are missing or presumed dead in the floods.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Climate change is making these extreme weather events more frequent everywhere. Australia one week, maybe our coastal cities the next. We need to take global warming seriously, yaar.
D
David E
A year's worth of rain in a week is unimaginable. The rescue teams are doing heroic work. Hope the warnings are being heeded and everyone stays off the roads.
A
Anjali F
Why do people still try to drive through floodwaters? It's the same here in India during the monsoons. It's so dangerous! Glad these individuals were rescued safely.
S
Siddharth J
The article mentions the human impact well, but 50,000 livestock is a huge economic blow. It highlights how disasters affect rural livelihoods globally. Australia has strong systems, but nature's fury is unmatched.
K
Karan T
Respectfully, while the coverage is good, it feels like a standard disaster report. I wish there was more on the ground perspective from the 3000 people cut off in Clermont. How are they managing essentials?

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