Torrential rain ravages Australian towns, thousands brace for isolation
A drone view shows a flooded area following heavy rains, in Tinonee, New South Wales, Australia May 21, 2025. Harrison Reed/Handout via REUTERS
A drone view shows a flooded area following heavy rains, in Tinonee, New South Wales, Australia May 21, 2025. Harrison Reed/Handout via REUTERS
A drone view shows a flooded area following heavy rains, in Tinonee, New South Wales, Australia May 21, 2025. Harrison Reed/Handout via REUTERS
A drone view shows a flooded area following heavy rains, in Tinonee, New South Wales, Australia May 21, 2025. Harrison Reed/Handout via REUTERS
SYDNEY - Torrential rain pummelled Australia's southeast on Thursday, triggering flash flooding and forcing officials to issue fresh evacuation orders, while 50,000 residents were warned to prepare to isolate with more downpours expected over the next 24 hours.
Major flooding is occurring in several rural towns in the Hunter and Mid North Coast regions of New South Wales, Australia's most populous state, with severe weather warnings stretching over a wide swathe of both areas.
Police said the body of a man was found in a flooded home near Taree, more than 300 km (186 miles) north of Sydney. The rural town is one of the worst-hit by the floods, that have washed away farms and destroyed homes, roads and bridges.
"I'm very sorry for that man's passing. We should be bracing for more tough news over the next 24 hours," New South Wales Premier Chris Minns told ABC News.
More than 100 schools are closed on Thursday, while thousands of properties remain without power, authorities said.
A slow-moving coastal trough has dumped about four months of rain over the past two days, cutting off entire towns and stranding residents on roofs and the second storeys of their homes, as rescuers struggled to access the area by boat or air.
Minns apologised to people who had to wait for several hours for rescue crews, but assured efforts had been ramped up with 2,500 emergency services personnel deployed on site.
Television video showed a woman winched to a helicopter from a flooded property.
Australia's Bureau of Meteorology forecast that some areas could receive up to 300 mm (12 inches) of rain through Friday, triggering life-threatening flash flooding, before the weather system is expected to weaken and track south toward Sydney.
"We've still got rain falling and some rivers still to peak ... we aren't over the worst of it yet," Federal Emergency Management Minister Kristy McBain told ABC Radio.
McBain said the Australian Defence Force has been carrying out search and rescue operations in the area. REUTERS
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
9 hours ago
- Straits Times
Helicopter crashes in northern Indian state, 6 people on board, ANI reports
A helicopter carrying six people crashed on Sunday in the northern Indian state of Uttarakhand, news agency ANI reported. The aircraft had gone missing in the Gaurikund area of the state, ANI reported, citing an official. Uttarakhand Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami said in an X post that the State Disaster Response Force (SDRF), local administration and other rescue teams were engaged in relief and rescue operations. Broadcaster India Today cited officials as saying the helicopter lost course due to bad weather. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
21 hours ago
- Straits Times
Third round of US Open underway at soggy Oakmont
OAKMONT, Pennsylvania - The third round of the U.S. Open got underway at a soggy Oakmont Country Club on Saturday with the early starters trying to close in on halfway leader Sam Burns on a treacherous course that was saturated by overnight rain. Burns, a five-times winner on the PGA Tour seeking his first major title, is three under for the week and will head out in the day's final pairing at 3:35 p.m. ET (1935 GMT) with a one-shot lead over playing partner J.J. Spaun. Viktor Hovland, who is two shots off the pace and the only other player under par, will be in the penultimate pairing with Australian Adam Scott, who is a further shot adrift in a share of fourth place with Ben Griffin. Thriston Lawrence, who was looking at a three-foot par putt on his final hole Friday when lightning forced a stoppage in play with 13 players on the course, completed his second round early on Saturday and is four shots back with Victor Perez. Lurking five shots off the pace in a four-way share of eighth place is LIV Golf's Brooks Koepka, who counts two U.S. Open titles among his five majors. Koepka will head out at 2:51 p.m. ET with Kim Si-woo. All players inside the cut line, which landed at seven over on the week, entered the weekend within 10 strokes of Burns. Pre-tournament favourite Scottie Scheffler, who was visibly frustrated while working on the range after a second-round 71 that left him seven shots off the lead, will set off at 1:02 p.m. ET alongside Cameron Young. "Around this golf course I don't think by any means I'm out of the tournament," Scheffler said on Friday. Former Masters champion Hideki Matsuyama, who made the cut on the number, went out early and bogeyed the opening hole. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
3 days ago
- Straits Times
Monsoon season to start early on Jeju Island from June 12
This year's monsoon season is projected to have an earlier start, with Jeju Island normally seeing monsoon rain around June 19 on average. ST PHOTO: ALBERT WAI JEJU - Jeju Island is expected to witness the start of this year's monsoon season on June 12 , with the rain expanding northward until June 14 , according to the Korea Meteorological Administration (KMA) on June 11 . On the morning of June 12 , rain is expected to fall on Jeju Island due to a stationary front situated south of the region. According to the KMA, the front formed under the influence of Typhoon Utip, the first typhoon of the summer, as it moved northward along the western coast of the Philippines toward southern parts of China. The state weather agency expects the North Pacific high-pressure system to expand westward, pushing the stationary front northward to trigger Jeju Island's first monsoonal rains of the season. This year's monsoon season is projected to have an earlier start, with Jeju Island normally seeing monsoon rain around June 19 on average. If weather conditions persist, this year's monsoonal rains will come a week earlier than usual and would mark the third-earliest monsoon season on record, trailing only 2020 and 2011's June 10 and matching 1998's June 12. On June 12 , the stationary front is expected to move eastward, while hot and humid air from the east of the Philippines will flow into the Korean Peninsula along the edge of the North Pacific high-pressure system. This will bring heavy rains of up to 60mm to Jeju Island, and up to 40 mm of rain to South Jeolla Province and South Gyeongsang Province. Rain clouds will also expand toward North Jeolla Province and southern parts of North Gyeongsang Province by late morning, bringing close to 5 to 20 mm of rain. By the afternoon, North Chungcheong Province as well as northern parts of North Gyeongsang Province can also expect to see rain, ranging between 5 and 10 mm. The KMA added that rain clouds will spread to most regions nationwide, including the Greater Seoul region and Gangwon Province, by June 13 , before clearing up later that night. Despite widespread rainfall, KMA meteorologist Gong Sang-min added that this week's rain is unlikely to mark the official start of monsoon season for other parts of Korea aside from Jeju Island. This is because rain must be triggered by a stationary front to be considered monsoonal rain, not simply from other systems. Though subject to change, heavy rainfall is also expected to fall nationwide from June 15 to June 16 , due to a clash between humid air flowing in from the south and a cold air mass moving down from the north. THE KOREA HERALD/ASIA NEWS NETWORK Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.