WORLD / Asia-Pacific

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

Reporters who flew into Innisfail on Tuesday saw scenes of devastation ¡ª rain forest shredded by the winds, acres of sugar and banana plantations flattened, the trees and cane on the ground next to their stumps, pointing in the direction that the cyclone tore past.

"It looks like it's just been napalmed," said helicopter pilot Ian Harris. "That's normally pristine rain forest."

An apartment block with its roof torn off looked from the air like a doll's house. A resident was inside picking through the wreckage.

"I never expected anything like this," said Rosarie Cullinane, a 24-year-old Irish backpacker who had been working at a local hostel. "I did hear about cyclones but I didn't think it was going to be that bad."

She said backpackers huddled in their hostel wrapped in mattresses as the storm raged outside.

The town's main street was littered with rubble from badly damaged buildings and the corrugated metal used for roofing in the region. In some parts of the street people waded through knee-deep water.

Stephen Young, deputy executive director of Queensland's Counter Disaster and Emergency Services, said relief was flowing to Innisfail from all over Australia.

About 120 troops were helping deliver aid, while clean up and specialist urban search and rescue crews were heading to the town.
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