Cyclone lashes remote Australian coast with wind, rains
SYDNEY, Australia — A vast and powerful cyclone made landfall Saturday along a remote stretch of the northern Australian coast, bringing fierce winds and heavy rains amid safety fears for a small number of residents who’ve stayed in the area.
Cyclone Trevor crossed the Gulf of Carpentaria coast at 9:50 a.m. local time (2250 GMT) in the far east of the Northern Territory, near its border with Queensland state. At the time of landfall it was a category 4 storm, with 5 being the strongest.
Most of the sparsely populated area had been evacuated, with more than 2,000 people put up in temporary accommodation in the Northern Territory capital Darwin, and the nearby town of Katherine.
But with the cyclone bringing wind gusts of up to 250 kilometres per hour (155 miles per hour) as it hit the coast, and with flash flooding expected as heavy rains met hard-baked lands recently hit by drought, authorities issued safety warnings for the small number of people who stayed put.