The heavy rain will continue in the coming 24 hours, with the Bureau of Meteorology warning some areas will receive 450mm of rainfall. Photo / Bureau of Meteorology
Authorities in Queensland ordered evacuations in Townsville as floods approach historic highs, warning of crocodiles.
A woman died after a boat capsized in Ingham; 2100 homes are under evacuation orders.
Premier David Crisafulli warned of more rain and urged residents to prepare for the worst.
One woman has died in Australia as authorities order people in the country’s flood-ravaged northeast to evacuate and be on the lookout for crocodiles as river levels approach historic highs.
Authorities in Queensland said parts of the state received more than 600mm in 24 hours.
With heavy rains continuing, residents in six flood-prone suburbs of Townsville, a city of around 200,000 people, were told to evacuate their homes Sunday.
The city’s disaster management group coordinator Zac Dawes said 2100 homes were under evacuation orders on Sunday evening.
But “about 10%” of the community did not heed the order, he said.
One of those was a woman in her 90s who has lived in Townsville all her life, according to her neighbour Shan Isis, who sought shelter at an evacuation centre.
“She’s refusing to come to the evacuation centre because she believes the floods aren’t going to be that bad, and she’s seen heaps of floods before,” Isis told the national broadcaster ABC.
Police said earlier that a woman died after the boat she was in capsized in the rural town of Ingham, around 230km from Cairns.
Queensland police superintendent Graeme Paine said the coming hours would be “really critical” for Townsville.
“Certainly for Townsville the indications are there will be an inundation that will impact people,” he said.
Rising floodwaters forced the closure of the local airport and Townsville University Hospital to delay elective surgeries, as the state declared that around 100 schools were “unsafe for students to attend”.
The state’s Premier David Crisafulli warned more rain was forecast in the coming days which could result in “record rainfalls”.
The weather conditions were unlike anything the state had experienced “for a long time”, Crisafulli said.
“It’s not just the intensity, but it’s also the longevity of it,” he told the ABC national broadcaster earlier on Sunday.
“Take the precautions, prepare for the worst, listen to the advice – please don’t discount this,” Crisafulli said.
Heavy rainfall that could lead to dangerous and life-threatening flash flooding is continuing to impact the area between Innisfail and Bowen today. In the past 24 hours, Queensland Fire and Rescue swiftwater rescue firefighters have responded to 15 water rescues. More of our… pic.twitter.com/IPlJjhBGUd