Monsoon triggers flooding in north Queensland; seven individuals saved from capsized boat near Lady Elliot Island

Monsoon triggers flooding in north Queensland; seven individuals saved from capsized boat near Lady Elliot Island

Seven seafarers ‍are lucky to be alive after ⁤their boat capsized in rough seas as monsoonal weather brought flooding to rivers across‌ Queensland.

Heavy ⁢rain persisted across the ⁣state’s drenched far ‍north on Sunday as towns‌ near the​ Victorian-New South Wales border faced their own flooding concerns.

A‌ monsoon trough over the Cape York Peninsula was expected to expand into the Coral Sea, ⁤persisting for several ⁤days.

Some western parts of the peninsula had already received ⁣150mm to ‌200mm, while more than 110mm fell over the outskirts of Cairns in the 24 hours to 9am on Sunday.

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Rough seas​ caused a seven-metre​ vessel on a surfing trip to Lady Elliot ⁣Island to overturn⁤ about 65km north-east of Bundaberg.

A Bundaberg LifeFlight ​rescue helicopter located the boat’s seven occupants ‍clinging⁣ to the hull after their emergency beacon ⁣activated about 5pm on Saturday.

The helicopter crew⁣ deployed a⁤ life raft to assist the stranded mariners until a volunteer Marine Rescue unit ‌picked them up about 7.30pm.

Meanwhile,⁣ heavy rains ⁣further south in recent days‍ have⁣ caused the Paroo River to swell.

The Bureau of Meteorology⁤ imposed a major flood warning at Eulo with​ a peak around 4m ⁢possible overnight ⁢Sunday and into Monday morning, although no further significant rain⁢ was forecast over the‌ next​ few days.

⛈️Today’s thunderstorm forecast (14/1): Heavy rainfall possible with thunderstorms in‍ the Far North & northwest along with parts of the #NorthTropicalCoast. Localised flash flooding & river level‍ rises ​are possible. ​Warnings & forecasts: https://t.co/bXflLCg2Lw and ‍on BOM App. ⁢pic.twitter.com/uIDsP88uar

— Bureau of Meteorology, ⁤Queensland ⁤(@BOM_Qld) January 13, 2024

As the clean-up continued⁣ in the area struck by ex-Cyclone Jasper in December, the Queensland‍ premier, Steven Miles, said first​ responders had been rotated⁢ to manage fatigue between disasters.

“If and when ⁣the next one strikes, and we know in Queensland the next disaster‌ is always​ just around the corner,‍ we⁣ have to make sure⁢ they’re ready,” he said.

Showers and thunderstorms with locally heavy falls were likely ⁢to continue on the peninsula until late Sunday into Monday, at which point rain could begin to become more‌ widespread, the Bureau of Meteorology said.

It coincided⁣ with abnormally high tides which have ‌caused some minor‍ flooding in ‌Cairns streets.

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2024-01-13 ⁤22:09:14
Source from www.theguardian.com
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