WORLD / Asia-Pacific

Aid sent to Australia cyclone area
(AP)
Updated: 2006-03-21 20:55

Soldiers carried aid to the cyclone-shattered town of Innisfail Tuesday as residents picked through streets littered with rubble and mangled roofs destroyed by one of Australia's most powerful cyclones in decades.

A car is seen stuck under fallen trees on one of the main roads outside Cairns leading to Innisfail after cyclone Larry swept through the region on Monday, March 20, 2006. The cyclone ripped roofs off buildings across Australia's northeastern coast packing winds up to 290 kph (180 mph), leaving an unknown number of people homeless but causing only a handful of minor injuries. [AP]

Troop trucks rumbled through the streets of Innisfail, the town of 8,500 that bore the brunt of Category-5 Cyclone Larry when it slammed into the coast of northeast Australia just before dawn Monday. By Tuesday, it had been downgraded to a tropical storm.

"One of the most immediate needs is to get shelter over roofless homes, and there are many," said Charlie McKillop, a spokesman for Attorney General Philip Ruddock, whose department was helping coordinate aid.

Bob Katter, a local lawmaker, said about 7,000 people were left without homes.

"There most certainly would be around 7,000 people ... that are effectively homeless," he told The Associated Press. "They're sitting in four walls but no roof."

Amazingly, the storm caused no reported fatalities, and only 30 people suffered minor injuries.
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