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Australia floods declared natural disaster

Five leap to their deaths in China to flee fire: state media
Beijing (AFP) Jan 3, 2010 - Five people were killed and seven injured when they leapt from a fifth-storey rooftop in southwest China to escape a fire engulfing the building, state media reported Sunday. The inferno took hold in the building in Guizhou province in the early hours of the morning Sunday, after a shop on the ground floor caught fire, Xinhua news agency reported. One other person inside the building was killed in the blaze, it said. The seven injured were being treated in a local hospital and all were expected to survive, the report said. The cause of the blaze was under investigation, it added.
by Staff Writers
Sydney (AFP) Jan 4, 2010
Australian authorities declared a natural disaster Monday in a southeastern farming town where raging floodwaters forced the evacuation of hundreds of people.

The swollen Castlereagh River peaked at 5.14 metres (17 feet) just before midday (0100 GMT) in Coonamble, the weather bureau said, after 1,200 residents in the New South Wales town were urged to leave their homes for higher ground.

Forecasters had feared the river would surge to a 40-year record of 5.5 metres and break its banks, putting hundreds of homes in the town at risk.

But the threat eased late in the morning when it appeared water levels had gone down slightly, the Bureau of Meteorology said in a statement.

"This indicates that the river is at its peak with major flooding," it said.

Heavy rains have pelted the drought-parched region since late December, with hundreds of centimetres of rain unleashed by ex-tropical cyclone Laurence.

Several towns have already been cut off by the once-in-a-decade deluge but no lives have been lost.

New South Wales Premier Kristina Keneally declared the town a natural disaster zone, making emergency funds available to hundreds of farmers and other residents.

Flooding rains were also recorded further north, in the neighbouring state of Queensland, while fires raged in the country's west.

An out-of-control blaze at Brigadoon on the outskirts of Perth razed sheds and damaged some buildings but no homes were lost, while severe fire warnings were in place for much of the state of Western Australia, authorities said.

The state's worst wildfire in 50 years devastated the isolated rural community of Toodyay last week, levelling 38 homes and destroying thousands of hectares (acres) of scrub and farmland.

It follows last February's "Black Saturday" fires, in which 173 Australians died and more than 2,000 homes were flattened -- the country's worst natural disaster of modern times.



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Australian residents urged to flee 'house-high' wildfires
Sydney (AFP) Dec 29, 2009
Australian officials urged residents to evacuate a wheat farming district in the west of the country Tuesday as towering wildfires with flames higher than rooftops threatened homes. People in the Dandaragan area north of Perth were told to flee immediately as the fast-moving and out-of-control blaze, fanned by "catastrophic" conditions in Western Australia, showered embers. "Homes will b ... read more







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