SYDNEY, Jul 2 (NNN-AAP) – A man has been hospitalised with critical injuries, and hundreds of properties have been flooded, amid heavy rain and destructive winds on Australia’s east coast.
A severe storm system crossed the coast yesterday, triggering widespread emergency warnings in the state of New South Wales (NSW), and intensified overnight, as trees were brought down and buildings damaged.
NSW Police said today that, a 55-year-old male has been hospitalised in a critical condition, after a tree fell and crushed the driver’s cabin of his semi-trailer truck, in the town of Moss Vale, 105 km south-west of Sydney, at about 10:30 p.m. last night.
Officers attended the scene and extracted the unconscious man from the vehicle. He was treated at the scene for serious head and torso injuries, before being taken to hospital in a critical condition.
According to the NSW State Emergency Service (SES), about 200 properties in the state’s South Coast region, 180 km south of Sydney, were flooded overnight, after some regions received more than 200 millimetres of rainfall in a 24-hour period.
As of 8.00 a.m. local time this morning, more than 35,000 homes and businesses in NSW were affected by blackouts.
Sydney Airport said, it expects cancellations and delays to continue throughout the day, and strong winds have also forced cancellations at Brisbane Airport, in the north-eastern state of Queensland.
Millions of residents of Sydney and the cities of Newcastle to the north and Wollongong to the south, have been advised to avoid non-essential travel, and public transport services have been widely disrupted.
Debbie Platz, deputy commissioner of the NSW SES, told Nine Network television that, many residents across the state have heeded warnings and prepared their homes, preventing further damage.
She said, the southern flank of the storm impacting Wollongong and surrounding regions is now the authorities’ area of greatest concern.
The Bureau of Meteorology said in a severe weather warning that, the low-pressure system is expected to move east, back out to sea later today.– NNN-AAP