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    Thousands evacuated from Cyclone Debbie

    By Xinhua-Reuters (China Daily) Updated: 2017-04-07 07:57

    WELLINGTON - Rescue workers used tractors and boats to evacuate thousands of people at the top of New Zealand's North Island on Thursday as floodwaters from ex-Cyclone Debbie surged in what meteorologists said was a once-in-500-years event.

    The effects of the former category 4 storm, one level shy of the most powerful category 5, were also still being felt in Australia more than a week after the cyclone pounded Queensland state with the town of Rockhampton flooded.

    Scores of roads were closed or blocked by landslips across New Zealand's North Island following two days of heavy rainfall caused by the tail-wind of Cyclone Debbie. The storm killed six people in Australia, smashed tourist resorts, brought down power lines and shut coal mines.

    No deaths have been reported in New Zealand, but authorities continued to search for a man reported missing in a swollen river.

    "There's still a risk of loss of life," New Zealand Deputy Prime Minister Paula Bennett said as rescue workers raced to evacuate the town of Edgecumbe in the Bay of Plenty.

    "Under no circumstances should people be looking at going back at the moment," she said. "The message must be really clear to people right now: Get out and stay out."

    New Zealand's mountainous terrain makes its roads susceptible to landslides and many regions are still recovering from November's magnitude-7.8 quake.

    Kaikoura, the coastal holiday town at the epicenter of that quake, was shut off from the rest of the country for the second time in six months as connecting roads were again hit by landslips.

    In Australia, where the deluge was still flowing through tropical river systems, water levels peaked in the city of Rockhampton at lunchtime on Thursday, flooding main streets, shops and homes.

    Residents rowed boats along main roads and muddy water covered the airport's runway. Authorities said the airport will be closed for six days and the water is not expected to recede until the weekend.

    The Australian disaster zone stretched 1,000 kilometers from Queensland's tropical resort islands and Gold Coast tourist strip to the farmlands of New South Wales state.

    Australian insurers have declared the event a catastrophe likely to cost more than $1 billion, with state officials saying recovery and repairs will take months.

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