
Australian authorities scrambled to airlift hospital patients from the path of a cyclone roaring toward the waterlogged north-eastern states and urged low-lying communities to evacuate because of potentially deadly flash floods.
Cyclone Yasi was expected to slam into the coast of Queensland state on Wednesday as a Category 4 storm and dump up to 1 meter of rain on communities already saturated from months of flooding.
“This storm is huge and it is life-threatening,” Queensland Premier Anna Bligh said. “I know many of us will feel that Queensland has already borne about as much as we can bear when it comes to disasters and storms, but more is being asked of us and I am confident that we are able to rise to this next challenge.”
Yasi was barreling toward the Queensland state coast as a strong Category 3 storm with winds up to 220 kph, but was expected to turn into a Category 4 storm with wind gusts up to 250 kph by Wednesday.
Ms Bligh said the military would airlift 250 patients from the waterfont Cairns Base and Cairns Private hospitals to Brisbane, the state capital.
Although there were no mandatory evacuation orders yet, residents in waterfront and low-lying areas from the cities of Cairns to Townsville were being advised to leave. Ian Stewart, the state’s disaster coordinator, said many people were deciding on their own to evacuate and that he would discuss with mayors whether forced evacuations were needed.
“In reality, we would like people to get as far south as possible, as quickly as possible, without of course breaking the rules,” he told reporters.
Another storm, Cyclone Anthony, hit Queensland early on Monday but quickly weakened and did little more than uproot some trees and damage power lines.
Queensland already has suffered flooding since heavy rains started in November. The floodwaters killed 35 people, damaged or destroyed 30,000 homes and businesses and left Brisbane, Australia’s third-largest city, under water for days.
Yasi is expected to strike farther north, sparing Brisbane and other towns that suffered the worst of the recent flooding. Still, Ms Bligh said the storm’s path could change and residents up and down the coast needed to prepare. “We could see very powerful flash flooding that will be dangerous and potentially deadly,” she said and described the storm as one of the largest and most significant cyclones the state has ever seen.
“Please make no mistake- this storm is a deadly event,” Stewart said. “Now is the time to act.”

