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Three dead as wild weather lashes Sydney region

Published: 21 Apr 2015 - 01:33 pm | Last Updated: 15 Jan 2022 - 04:36 am


Sydney--Three people died as Sydney and surrounding areas were lashed by wild weather Tuesday with trees felled, power cuts hitting thousands of homes and sand drifts sweeping inland off the iconic Bondi beach.
Sea swells also hampered shipping as the region around Australia's biggest city suffered its second day of gale-force winds of up to 135 kilometres per hour (83 mph) and torrential rain.
The Bureau of Meteorology said 119 millimetres (five inches) of rain had fallen in Sydney in 24 hours -- the city's wettest period since 2002.
The powerful winds blanketed parks, pavements and roads with sand from beaches, including Bondi.
Dozens of flights were delayed and one cruise ship found itself stuck at sea outside Sydney Harbour.
The State Emergency Services said it had dealt with more than 3,000 calls for help and carried out 20 flood rescues.
"There have been multiple persons trapped in vehicles, being trapped in buildings and being trapped on top of buildings while trying to take refuge from floodwaters," the agency's deputy chief Steven Pearce told reporters.
Speaking earlier to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, he said: "We've haven't seen this sort of weather pattern, this east-coast low or one as severe as this, in years."
The Sydney Harbour pilot could not board the giant Carnival Spirit cruise ship due to massive swells, with the vessel languishing in the open ocean with hundreds of passengers on board.
The Port Authority of New South Wales state said the harbour had been closed for commercial shipping, possibly for 48 hours. Ferries across Sydney were cancelled or had limited services.
New South Wales police said three people had died in the country town of Dungog, 215 kilometres (133 miles) north of Sydney.

AFP