The main highway collapses partially while the Australian floods get worse
Parts of the great Australian highway are washed out because the flood in Queensland is deteriorating.
Bujica rains in the north of the state have so far taken one life and forced thousands to flee their homesWith communities in Townsville, Ingham and Cardwell among the most severe goal.
“Records” will continue, the authorities say, with parts of the region that have been experiencing more than 1.3 m (4.2 ft) of rain since Saturday, which is why the dams and rivers overflow.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese – who was familiar with the efforts on Monday on the answers – said the disaster purchased “the best of Australians”.
“I saw the Australians help each other in their time of need,” he wrote on X, adding that “flood waters threat” will last for days in the affected areas.
The efforts to get rescue teams in some of the worst cities and cities are disturbed by the collapse of the Bruce motorway – a large part of the infrastructure that connects Brisbane to the regional centers of the country that is longer than the road between London and Warsaw.
The Queensland transportation association told ABC that it was a damage – which caused the bridge to be glued – it could add an additional 700 KM (434 miles) to the key routine routes, slowing down the delivery of critical supplies.
Prime Minister Queensland David Crisafuli expressed his condolences to a “narrow wicker” Inghamam city-where the 63-year-old woman died in an attempt to rescue after being covered by the Dinghy State Emergency Service on Sunday.
“We are deeply sorry about their loss,” he told reporters, adding that he would travel to the northern Queensland later on Monday.
He also called on all the inhabitants located in the so -called “black zone” of the flood – which includes six suburbs of Townsville – not to return home, because of the current threat represented by the nearby Ross Ross.
The Australian Meteorology Office announced that the area was granted six months of rain in three days, while the local disaster management group in Townsville warned that 2,000 homes could be flooded and some to the second floor, as the water level increased.
A persistent flood – which is gradually alleviated by time reports – has swollen waterways throughout the region. High flood warnings remain at the site for the Hebert, Ross rivers, Bohle, Horton and Gornji Burdekin.
Emergency respondents continued to work on a daily basis, with SES received 480 calls for help on Sunday on Monday and performed 11 fast water rescue. Disconnected current interruptions are still reported, which some communities cannot call for help.
The deputy commissioner Ses Shane Chelepipy urged people to stay awake and check their neighbors whenever possible. He added that about 400 people are now located in the Townsville, Ingham and Cardwell Evacuation Centers.
Located in the tropics, the northern Queensland is vulnerable to destructive cyclones, storms and floods.
But climate scientists have warned that warmer oceans and warmer planet create conditions for more intense and more frequently extreme rainy events.
Meteorologists say current floods could be the worst that has hit over 60 years in the region.