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Charges put Labor campaign under arrest

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 31 Januari 2013 | 22.54

Embattled federal MP Craig Thomson has been granted bail after being charged with fraud.

JULIA Gillard's high-stakes election strategy has been rocked by ex-Labor MP Craig Thomson's arrest on 149 fraud charges, including allegedly using union funds to pay for prostitutes.

JULIA Gillard's high-stakes election strategy has been rocked by ex-Labor MP Craig Thomson's arrest on 149 fraud charges, including allegedly using union funds to pay for prostitutes.

Police arrested the MP yesterday over allegations he misappropriated hundreds of thousands of dollars of funds while he was Health Services Union national secretary.

The charges follow an investigation by Victorian fraud squad detectives in relation to claims Mr Thomson allegedly spent more than $7000 of union monies on escort services.

A shaken Mr Thomson emerged from the Wyong Court late yesterday after being granted bail, including one condition that he not contact "directly or indirectly" anyone who he allegedly engaged for sexual services.

The one-time Labor rising star - who was dumped by the ALP over alleged indiscretions while he was a union boss - will travel to Melbourne next week for a court hearing and vowed to "vigorously defend" the multiple charges.

Craig Thomson Leaves Wyong Court. Picture: Mark Scott

"As I have said from the start, I have done no wrongdoing and that's what will be found in these matters," he said.

Victorian fraud squad detectives - who invited Mr Thomson to travel to Melbourne before Christmas - will allege that he used HSU funds to pay for escorts and personal items.

Police have worked closely with Fair Work Australia, which has also taken legal action against Mr Thomson.

The FWA court action - which is set down for a directions hearing in Melbourne this morning - may be deferred to allow the more serious criminal allegations to be heard by a court.

And in a further setback for Mr Thomson, NSW police confirmed that he remained a "person of interest" in relation to Strikeforce Carnarvon. That investigation has already led to multiple charges being laid against former Labor powerbroker and union boss Michael Williamson.

MP Craig Thomson denies any wrongdoing as he faces charges of 150 counts of fraud.

Labor MPs reacted with horror upon hearing of the charges laid against their former colleague, who received more than $300,000 in legal assistance from the NSW ALP as he fought the allegations of fraud.

The MP is alleged to have used two union credit cards to make cash withdrawals and for unauthorised transactions, including more than $7000 spent on prostitutes. News Limited understands police have engaged forensic experts to try and prove their case against the MP.

The Prime Minister declined to comment on the arrest of her former colleague, telling reporters in the flooded city of Bundaberg that it was a matter for the police.

But Opposition leader Tony Abbott claimed the Thomson scandal reflected badly on Ms Gillard's political judgement. "It's always been about the judgement of the Prime Minister," Mr Abbott said, during a major speech to the National Press Club.

During a brief appearance in the Wyong Court, Mr Thomson was formally charged with one count of misuse of a credit card to the value of $330. He did not enter a plea but was remanded to appear in the Melbourne Magistrates Court on February 6.

He was given bail on three conditions including that he notify police within 24 hours of any change of address and that he give 24 hours notice of any travel overseas or interstate with the exception of travel to Canberra.

He was also told not to contact "directly or indirectly" any person he is alleged to have had any sexual contact with.

Mr Thomson nodded when he was asked if he understood the bail conditions.


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Benji and his mystery brunette

Rocker Benji Madden and girlfriend in Bondi yesterday. Picture: Splash Source: The Daily Telegraph

BENJI Madden has brought his mysterious new girlfriend Down Under for Good Charlotte's latest Aussie tour.

The happy couple, first seen together late last year following the rock man's bust-up with Brit popette Eliza Doolittle, were laughing and looking loved up while getting coffee in Bondi yesterday.

"They looked really cute. They just seemed really into each other," a witness said. Madden and his twin, The Voice coach Joel, the support act for Keith Urban, played their second show at Allphones Arena last night.

Having been house-hunting for a while, Benji recently said he was hoping to buy in Sydney this year.

Joel has said he and wife Nicole Ritchie agree Australia is their favourite place.


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The street that washed away

HINKLER Avenue in Bundaberg North. Source: The Courier-Mail

ELIZABETH Pomfrett stood at the top of Hinkler Ave in blazing sun, peering down towards her North Bundaberg home, which she knew was flooded but couldn't reach due to a police exclusion zone.

The 69-year-old's hands shook as she told of the evacuation of her frail husband, Alan, 70, and how she turned back in her rescue dinghy to see water reaching the roof of her home of 22 years.

"It was still rising then," Mrs Pomfrett said. "It would have gone completely over the top. I got almost nothing out."

See more pictures of the flood crisis

She was upset, too, for her neighbour, Isabella Schulze, who turned 80 on the Australia Day holiday as water engulfed her house.

Mrs Pomfrett had just learnt that Mrs Schulze's house was one of several that used to line Hinkler Ave that are simply no longer there.

As she spoke, surrounded by North Bundaberg residents desperate to get back to their sodden homes, the surreal beep-beep of a smoke alarm sounded from Queen St, several hundred metres away.

It came from a crumpled weatherboard home that had been swept off its stumps in Hinkler Ave by the floodwaters and travelled at least 400m before being brought to a halt by a street light 

The Courier-Mail was escorted by police into the exclusion zone and down to the crumpled house yesterday.

LONELY SEAT: The toilet held firm while all around it was flushed away at this North Bundaberg property. Picture: Mark Calleja

We passed the flotsam and jetsam of people's lives before reaching the kitchen of the home, the cabinet and sink ripped from the wall. An unbroken glass sat upright on the floor, filled with muddy water.

Insulation bats hung like massive cobwebs from the ceiling, the tin roof was crumpled on the sides but still intact - and the alarm kept beeping.

Police believed it was Mrs Schulze's home but there was reason for doubt - the house at 36 Hinkler Ave and an old Wesley Methodist Church at 18 Hinkler Ave were also gone.

As we walked back from Queen St and down Hinkler Ave, the extent of the damage, the impact on people's lives, was almost too much to take in. All manner of debris, from tyres to laundry baskets, sat high in tree branches, cars were stuck against trees and mud covered the road.

At No. 26 - the house Mrs Schulze shared with her carer, Mal Shannon, 70 - all that was left was a blond brick veranda and a few stumps.

The two were safe, though, taken to their friends, John and Ros Blackwood, as the waters rose on Sunday.

Mrs Blackwood had helped them out during the 2010 floods and had made her way from her home on Moore Park Rd to see if they needed help.

Mrs Schulze and Mr Shannon stayed Sunday night with the Blackwoods, were later evacuated to the other side of Bundaberg and are now staying with friends.

While Mrs Schulze and Mr Shannon saved their belongings but lost their home, neighbour Mrs Pomfrett lost her belongings but still had a house.

A dislodged house from Hinkler Ave, North Bundaberg that ended up about 400m away in Queen Street. Pic Mark Calleja

She said she didn't have anyone to help move her things, which she had managed to salvage in the lesser 2010 floods.

As the waters rose, she was darting between her daughter Victoria's nearby place and her own home, concerned about getting her husband to safety.

An SES dinghy came and evacuated Alan from Victoria's home, returning later to rescue Mrs Pomfrett and Victoria, whose house was also flooded.

"We were watching it come up and then they said it was coming up another 3m and that's when we thought 'we better get out of here'," Mrs Pomfrett said.

"So the SES helped me through the running water and over to the Globe Hotel, then they put us in little dinghies and brought us around here, passed my house and that's when I saw it (the water) at the roof."

Further along, at No. 18, the old Methodist church where Katie Holden was married had also disappeared, only the stumps and a washed out sign remaining.

Mrs Holden, 31, had also waited at the roundabout to find out if she could get through the exclusion zone - in place to allow police, army and services personnel to check for safety - to get through to her parents' place.

Gaylene and Terry Adams, 53 and 49, never expected their home at 14 Hinkler Ave to be swamped as the last flood had only come up ankle deep on the lower level.

Mrs Holden said they had been hearing reports that the water would peak at 8.5m. But it went higher, eventually peaking at 9.5m. About 2.30am on Monday, the pair swam to a higher house next door.

Flood damage in Hinkler Ave where several houses were washed off their stumps. Pic Mark Calleja

"They swam out in the middle of the night - with water up to their necks and their six cats and a dog - into the next door neighbour's," Mrs Holden said.

"They put the cats in a plastic box with a lid on and the dog swam beside them. They weren't leaving their animals."

With Mrs Holden was her sister-in-law, Nicola Patrick, 21, who had also lost everything in her rented home she shared with her husband and eight-month-old son.

"We're a tough family," Mrs Holden said.

"We'll get through this together."

Hinkler Ave leads on to the Tallon Bridge, which could be closed for weeks because of a massive washout.

Off Hinkler Ave, on Thornhill St, a dozen cars and a large truck, all covered in mud, sat higgledy piggledy across the road, seemingly parked there by their owners with the hope it was high enough ground.

It wasn't.

A brick house in Thornhill St has also disappeared - all that remains are bricks all over the road and the adjacent cricket ground, where mountains of debris had collected.

Nine News shows the damages of the Bundaberg floods up close, as army personnel come to help the clean up effort.

Around the corner in Wilmot St, the army was checking door to door to make sure properties were safe.

The devastation is huge, but the heart of Bundy is bigger and its people will bounce back.

But it will need help - lots of it.

A boat lodged into trees and fence on Hinkler Ave. Pic Mark Calleja

The Prime Minister Julia Gillard has toured flood ravaged communities in Queensland's Wide Bay region.


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Newman vows to be a floods buster

Flooding around Depot Hill in Rockhampton where flood levels are meant to peak on late Friday or early Saturday. Picture: Tim Marsden Source: The Courier-Mail

THE repair bill from this week's Queensland flood emergency was last night estimated to have topped that left by the 2010-11 disaster.

Premier Campbell Newman said early estimates yesterday put the damage across Queensland at more than $2.4 billion - and rising.

The damage bill from the floods two years ago was $2.38 billion, according to the Insurance Council of Australia.

Mr Newman told The Courier-Mail that with the state now facing its second multibillion-dollar repair bill to public infrastructure alone in as many years, it was time to take on the bolder challenge of ensuring as many towns and communities as possible were "flood and disaster-proofed".

"We can't accept that our communities can be flooded every couple of years," Mr Newman said. "We can't accept that's how life has to be lived."

Mr Newman said his priority was first helping those affected by this week's floods many of whom have been unable to take out flood insurance due to there being too great a risk.

But he said the Government's focus must quickly shift to a permanent fix.

SURVEYING DAMAGE: Premier Campbell Newman, Emergency Services Minister Jack Dempsey and Rockhampton Mayor Margaret Strelow at Rockhampton. Pic: Tim Marsden

He said successive governments over the past 20 years had failed to put measures in place to protect communities from these sorts of natural disasters.

"It will be massive and costly," Mr Newman said.

"But it's an election year, and we're going to have to get the Federal Government and the Opposition and local governments to be part of this debate. Insurance companies can make a contribution as well."

Mr Newman said he would also seek public input about "what they want and what they can deliver".

Some of the measures in mind, include levees, flood mitigation dams and even the relocation of parts of communities. Mr Newman said the Commonwealth's National Disaster Relief and Recovery Arrangements did not properly provide for his ambitious plan.

"Is the Federal Government happy to keep writing cheques to repair the same roads time and time again?

The Prime Minister Julia Gillard has toured flood ravaged communities in Queensland's Wide Bay region.

"How many times do they want to write a cheque for the same section of washed away Bruce Highway?" the Premier asked.

"Surely there is a business case to provide flood immunity."

Mr Newman said he would not be opposed to the Federal Government imposing another flood levy on taxpayers to help pay for the recovery - as long as his government got its share. But Prime Minister Julia Gillard would not be drawn on the idea of a levy.

Insurers yesterday had received about 25,800 claims for this week's floods, with estimated insured losses of about $290 million, the Insurance Council said.

A boat lodged into trees and fence on Hinkler Ave. Pic Mark Calleja

Nine News shows the damages of the Bundaberg floods up close, as army personnel come to help the clean up effort.


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Revenge attack fear after fire charge

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 30 Januari 2013 | 22.54

Bushfires threatened towns Glenmaggie, Licola and Seaton. Picture: Erin Marie Source: Herald Sun

POLICE have revealed they are guarding the home of a 75-year-old man accused of starting a massive killer bushfire.

Detectives said they had set up sophisticated surveillance around Grahame Code's property due to fear of revenge attacks.

The force also urged the public to "respect and have confidence in the judicial process" after Mr Code - accused of starting a 75,000-hectare blaze - was remanded in custody until Tuesday.

He appeared at Latrobe Valley Magistrates' Court in Morwell yesterday after being charged by arson and explosives squad detectives.

The Aberfeldy man faced five offences, including recklessly causing bushfire and causing a fire to be lit without written authority in a fire-protected area.

His defence did not apply for bail and he was remanded to appear before the same court on Tuesday.

"Police wish to remind members of the public of the need to respect and have confidence in the judicial process and allow it to run its course," spokeswoman Natalie Webster said.

"Police have employed sophisticated surveillance to ensure the man's property is not the subject of any criminal offences."

Mr Code is a well-known wedding celebrant in the area, running his business, Wedding Excellence, from an office in Traralgon with his wife, Lynda.

The couple also run a music museum from their property, take groups on walking tours of the area and rent out five holiday cabins, and Mr Code is listed as the Secretary of the Cemetery Trusts in Aberfeldy.

"Graham has had a lifetime love affair with Aberfeldy and the eastern Highlands," a website promoting their businesses reads.

Detectives say the blaze started on a rural property in Aberfeldy on the morning of January 17.

The fire claimed the life of 84-year-old grandfather Stan Hayhurst, who was killed in his car as fire swept through Seaton the following day.

It also burnt more than 75,000 hectares of land across Aberfeldy, Heyfield and Seaton, destroying 22 homes and more than 200 livestock.

The Country Fire Authority says the fire is likely to continue to burn for months and could still threaten further property.

jon.kaila@news.com.au


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That's how you fight like a man

Daniel Geale finally gets the last word as he proves too fast for Anthony Mundine, winning by a unanimous decision.

Daniel Geale retains his title. Picture: Brett Costello Source: The Daily Telegraph

DANIEL Geale brought respectability back to the circus last night.

An Australian flag over his shoulder, a salute to the crowd that was largely in his favour, and an exit with the IBF middleweight belt around his waist.

Geale won the fight but even he would be hard-pressed this morning to say he won it the way he wanted to.

Best put it in the bank and move on.

"He came prepared and he gave me a hard, hard fight," Geale said.

GALLERY: All the action from the main event

Mundine was brave and surprised many, except the judges.

Judge Charlie Lucas scored it 116-112, Ray Reed 117-111 and Tony Marretta 117-111, all to Geale.

Rather than sounding the death-knell for Mundine's career it might have invigorated it. If anyone could stand another pre-fight build-up like this one - and that is a very, very big "if", for who really could - could there be a third?

Daniel Geale lands a heavy shot to Anthony Mundine's head. Picture: Brett Costello Source: The Daily Telegraph

For one, when Mundine tried to apologise to Geale's wife Sheena in the ring after the fight, she politely turned her head.

By then Mundine had already fallen into another Muhammad Ali impersonation - this time after Ali beat Sonny Liston the first time - by yelling at his critics ringside.

"I'm talking to you," he said, I believe to somebody behind me.

Old Man: Geale says Mundine is past his best

It wasn't so scary.

No, it was a contest deserved of the build-up, Sometime ago, who knows when, the fight shifted territory. It went from a fight to an event, that boundary that all the big fights cross.

It crossed over, and so the likes of NSW Premier Barry O'Farrell and Sports Minister Grahame Annesley were ringside. NRL players were speckled throughout the crowd. A-League boss David Gallop.

And given the lead up it was only natural there were small controversies.

The Buzz: Thugs, mugs and a who's who of stars

The national anthem was sung and done before either fighter had entered the ring. It was the apparent solution to Anthony Mundine's protest threat.

Instead, Mundine came to the ring with the anthem of his career. Didgeridoos kicked it off, boos and cheers cancelled each other out, and as the music stepped up into a hip-hop mixture Muhammad Ali, the soundtrack to Mundine's life, started chanting "The champ is here".

Then came the true champ.

Anthony Mundine enters the ring. Picture: Brett Costello Source: The Daily Telegraph

Geale, reclaiming his heritage, came in to nothing but the haunting sound of didgeridoo.

What a pity with two proud men, two proud Aboriginals fighting for a legitimate world title for the first time in history, that the national anthem was forced to be played before both men entered the ring to avoid Mundine's planned protest.

An opportunity gone.

But hey, they were here to fight.

The fight started nervously, carefully, for both men. Geale landed the first heavy shot, a left hook over Mundine's right temple.

But whatever Mundine had left, possibly mystique, Geale was respecting.

Anthony Mundine makes a quick exit after the judges award a unanimous points decision to Daniel Geale in their IBF middleweight title bout.

And while it was always clear Geale was going to press the pace from the start, Mundine showed he was more than willing from the first bell.

The first two rounds were sharp and cautious. Both wary of what the other was capable of.

Barriers began breaking down in the third, though. A Geale left hook, overhand right combination sprayed water from Mundine's head, a heavy thud coming from the gloves.

Quiet achiever: Geale schools The Man

Mundine was warned for a headbutt at one point. Referee Robert Byrd giving him a sharp warning.

By the fourth, the fight was on.

The anxiety was punched out of both men and, from here, they fought. Nerves were no longer a factor.

The crowd was clearly in Geale's favour. For what protests Mundine raised during the lead-up, for the role he sees himself, the When a "Mundine ... Mundine ..." chanted started in the fifth it was drowned out by boos.

Later he landed an elbow flush. He rabbit punched after the break. He landed another elbow. He did what he could to win.

Daniel Geale rocks Anthony Mundine with a straight left. Picture: Brett Costello Source: The Daily Telegraph

As the rounds wore on, Mundine was proving more resilient In a way, he hoodwinked Geale. He did not throw the overhand right nearly as much as he worked on for most of his camp, wary of Mundine's left hook counter.

And where he planned to stick to Mundine's chest, forever pressing the pace, Mundine was surprisingly resilient. His sharp counter punching was slowly taking a toll and, with it, Mundine's confidence was growing.

Still, Geale was winning the fight. He claimed the early rounds and even in the mid-to-late rounds he stood Mundine up with solid shots.

He was landing the great majority of heavier blows, thumping shots high on Mundine's head.

Yet Mundine was going nowhere. He shimmied and shifted, and always came back.

Anthony Mundine walks out in disgust after his loss. Picture: Mark Evans Source: The Daily Telegraph


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Premier talks of dams, levees in rebuild plan

A distraught resident takes in the damage to his home in Bundaberg. Pic: Getty Images Source: Getty Images

BILLIONS of dollars worth of repairs completed on Queensland's damaged public infrastructure after the 2010-11 floods will have to be redone.

The massive scale of this week's flood crisis is only now beginning to emerge.

Not only have thousands of homes been inundated, almost 5000km of roads damaged, and entire farms literally washed away, but the death toll is now at six, with the discovery yesterday of the bodies of two men near Laidley.

And as the muddy waters began to recede across large parts of the state yesterday, the flood crisis was not over.

In Rockhampton, nervous residents are waiting on a flood now set to hit tomorrow afternoon. In Condamine, supplies were being stockpiled last night in anticipation of a flood likely to cut off the town for a week.

Other communities still face being cut off for weeks or even months, and will have to rely on helicopters for resupplies.

Premier Campbell Newman yesterday said that while the damage bill from the state's latest clash with Mother Nature was not yet known, he vowed that no time would be wasted in starting work to rebuild.

This house floated from North Bundaberg and ended up in Queen St. Pic Mark Calleja

"This is going to be a long, drawn-out process but the Government will deliver," Mr Newman said.

The Premier vowed to "do my darnedest" to ensure the construction of flood mitigation dams and levees to protect flood-prone towns and cities.

And he called on local governments to ensure that town-planning policies were more conscious of the flood risk.

Latest list of school closures

"We are going to go back and do it and maybe there will be ways to actually do it in a better way this time," Mr Newman said.

He also announced a flood appeal committee to oversee the distribution of disaster relief funds.

The sun rises over flooded streets in Bundaberg. Pic: Getty Images

Local Government Minister David Crisafulli said it was clear another monumental task now faced affected communities, their councils, and the State Government.

"It is going to take a mountain of effort," Mr Crisafulli said.

The army was yesterday trucking in food and water to the flooded communities of Oakwood, Gayndah and Mundubbera.

Some farmers expect to be without an income for at least six months, while consumers face shortages of basic foods such as tomatoes, potatoes and leaf crops as the hardest hit areas were the high-producing foodbowls of Boonah, Kalbar, the Lockyer Valley, Mundubbera, Gayndah and Bundaberg.

Already 25,000 insurance claims have been lodged, and the state faces its second multibillion-dollar repair bill in just two years.

Some of the infrastructure damaged has only just been repaired after the floods of 2010-11.

Thousands of people across Queensland are spending the night in evacuation centres because of flooding.

In the southeast, 40,000 homes and businesses were still without power last night and there was still a threat some Brisbane suburbs might run dry as the city's main water treatment plants at Mt Crosby continued to struggle to filter the muddy floodwaters.

In hardest-hit North Bundaberg, the record flood rapidly receded yesterday - exposing cars, boats and fridges lodged high up trees and roads washed away.

On one street, three buildings appear to have vanished. More than 200 soldiers arrived last night to begin the clean-up.

They will spend today making urgent repairs to roads and bridges, clearing stormwater drains and helping restart sewage treatment plants, and will stay as long as required.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard will tour Bundaberg today.

About 1500 homes are believed to have been flooded in North Bundaberg.

It was a humid, hazy, morning on the Gold Coast with wild seas whipping up the foam and causing more erosion.

Hundreds are expected to remain uninhabitable.

There are still estimated to be 7500 displaced Bundaberg residents.

Lyn Baker was among the first North Bundaberg residents who were able to return to their homes yesterday.

Water was dripping out of the wedding photos as she looked up with tired eyes and shrugged: "We just didn't think it would get us here."

Her lowset home in North Bundaberg was at least 1km from the Burnett River, and had been high and dry in the flood that caused chaos in the sugar city only two years ago.

But when the 64-year-old and her husband of six years, Phil, 60, returned yesterday it was evidence the unprecedented 9.5m flood had definitely got them.

The town of Bundaberg hit by floods. Pic Mark Calleja

Every time Lyn picked up something from a cupboard, it dripped with water and mud.

The photos were the most precious, left behind as they fled their home as evacuation orders were issued.

The couple had already pulled up all the carpet and friends were helping sweep out the "dirty, disgusting mud" from the home.

One of the friends, Bruce Potter, had helped all day on Sunday night ferrying people who were stranded in their homes in North Bundaberg.

His dinghy has a 75 horsepower engine but at times it couldn't compete against the flood.

"There was that much water running across the roads it was like rapids," he said.

Watch the Brisbane River rise due to the ongoing flooding problems around the state.

"I couldn't get the boat up, because you're going up the rapids and the boat's sucked down. "No wonder there's a house sitting in the middle of Queen Street."

Sure enough, in the middle of one of the main roads leading to the Burnett Bridge and to the main part of town is a house that has been swept off its stumps.

The old weatherboard house is crumpled, but largely intact and has come to rest up against street lights. It is understood to be one of three buildings missing from Hinkler Ave, about 200m away.

The Courier-Mail was flown into North Bundaberg on an army Black Hawk, making it the first media team on the ground in North Bundaberg, which is still cut off from the main part of town.

A large washout on the north side of the other bridge into town, the Don Tallon Bridge, is expected to keep it closed for at least a few days. At the airport before going up in the air to survey his city, Mayor Mal Forman, said there were about 1500 houses on the northside that were flood affected.

"I'm very proud of our people," he said. "They are showing so much fortitude, so much community spirit, I know for a fact that out of adversity will come strength."

Leisa Scott, Kelmeny Fraser, and Kathleen Donaghey


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US man kills bus driver, kidnaps child

Residents look over the school bus where a shooting occurred near Destiny Church,  just north of Midland City, Alabama. Picture: Danny Tindell Source: AP

POLICE, SWAT teams and negotiators are clustered at a rural Alabama property where a man is believed to be holed up in an underground shelter after fatally shooting the driver of a school bus and fleeing with a 6-year-old child passenger, authorities said.

The standoff went through the night after the man, whose name has not been released by police, boarded the stopped school bus in the town of Midland City on Tuesday afternoon. Dale County Sheriff Wally Olsen told WBMA-TV the man shot the driver when he refused to let the child off the bus and the driver later died.

The sheriff's office named the victim as Charles Albert Poland, Jr, 66, who had been a bus driver since 2009 for the Dale County Board of Education.

The shooter took the child off the bus, authorities said.

About 50 vehicles from federal, state and local agencies were clustered at the mouth of a dirt road off a highway. The dead-end road leads to homes including the suspect's property, which was over a low rise behind a church on the highway and couldn't be seen from where reporters were being kept back.

County coroner Woodrow Hilboldt said the overnight standoff continued into the day with tactical units, negotiators and other officers at the scene near a church. He said the suspect was believed to be in an underground shelter on his property.

Law enforcement personnel work a checkpoint in Midland City, below the home where a school bus shooting suspect barricaded himself in a bunker with a young child. Picture: Jay Hare

"That's what has been described to me as an underground bunker. Someplace to get out of the way of a tornado," Mr Hilboldt said.

Claudia Davis, who lives on the road where the standoff was taking place, said she and her neighbours can't leave because the one road was blocked by police.

Ms Davis, 54, said she has had run-ins with the man suspected as the shooter.

"Before this happened I would see him at several places and he would just stare a hole through me," Ms Davis said. "On Monday I saw him at a laundry mat and he seen me when I was getting in my truck and he just started and stared and stared at me."

Midland City police would not comment, and a dispatcher at the Dale City Sheriff's office said the agency was not releasing any immediate details.

"Authorities also confirmed the presence of a child at the scene but are giving no further information at this time," Rachel David, a spokeswoman for the police department in the nearby city of Dothan, said in a news release late Tuesday.

Michael Creel, who lives on the road where the shooting happened, said he went outside after his sister heard gunshots.

"Me and her started running down the road," Creel told the Dothan Eagle. "That's when I realised the bus had its siren going off. Kids were filing out, running down the hill toward the church."


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Teen's terror after being set alight

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 29 Januari 2013 | 22.54

Luke Coburn, 17, in a picture taken from Facebook. Two men set him on fire while he was sitting in his family carport. Source: adelaidenow Source: adelaidenow

FIRE-ATTACK victim Luke Coburn ran through his family home screaming: "I'm on fire ... I'm going to die".

He had rolled on the front lawn trying to smother flames engulfing him after he was doused with a flammable liquid and set alight about 11.30pm on Sunday.

As Luke's father raced to extinguish a fire that had burst out of the garage door and half way down the front driveway his mother hurried the teenager to the shower.

"It was horrible ... he was screaming: 'I'm on fire ... I'm going to die'," Luke's mum, Cheryl, said.

The 17-year-old had been in the carport of his family home in Chellaston St, Munno Para West, with a friend when two unknown attackers first doused him with a flammable liquid and then threw a match in the garage.

Luke Coburn in hospital after being set alight at his Munno Para West home.

Luke is being treated in the Royal Adelaide Hospital for serious burns to his face, arms, back and neck.

His mother told adelaidenow the burns cover 28 per cent of his body.

"He has had a full skin graft on his left arm and 6 per cent of his right arm is burnt. His chest, back, shoulders and thigh is burnt ... and all over his face and neck."

Police believe the "cowardly and despicable" attack was not random and are searching for the two offenders, who were last seen running from the scene.

A teenage set alight at Munno Para West, Christies Beach drowning and Reds coach John Kosmina quits the club

Detective Chief Inspector Tony Crameri, of Elizabeth CIB, said police were looking for an adult who was wearing a black long-sleeved top, black tracksuit pants and black shoes.

The second suspect was wearing a white short-sleeved top with blue horizontal stripes and black tracksuit pants.

A neighbour told adelaidenow his private CCTV captured the flash of the flame and images of youths running from the property.

Luke and his friends regularly use the garage as a place to hang out.

The Munno Para West garage where a youth, 17, was set alight by two other youths. Picture: Mark Brake

Luke's mother and his friends said they had no idea who would attack the teen.

"There is no reason for this whatsoever," Cheryl said.

A friend said all Luke and the other youth in the garage with him had seen was two shadows.

"One came past and threw the fuel in over him and then another came past and threw a match in," the friend said.

Luke's aunt, Hazel,said Luke first thought the liquid was water.

"Next minute he was covered in flames," she said.

"He rolled on the ground to put himself out and then his mum put him in the shower."

Anyone with information can contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or at www.sa.crimestoppers.com.au.


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Why Mundine plans to boycott anthem

Daniel 'Real Deal' Geale explains why The Man won't be able to cope with the pressure he'll bring to the ring at the SEC

Boxer Anthony Mundine has hinted he will protest against the Australian national anthem before his fight with Daniel Geale. Picture: Brett Costello Source: The Daily Telegraph

Tasmanian says he is a different fighter to the one who lost to 'The Man' in 2009. (Geale v Mundine, Jan 30, LIVE on MAIN EVENT, Foxtel channel 518 or at your local Fox Sports pub or club)

Anthony Mundine takes another verbal job at Daniel Geale ahead of their much-anticipated bout.

ANTHONY Mundine has revealed why he plans to boycott Australia's national anthem tomorrow - he wants to to 'educate and unite Australians', it has been reported.

After The Daily Telegraph last week revealed his plans to boycott the anthem at Wednesday's IBF world title clash with Daniel Geale, Mundine has spoken about his reasons for the protest.

"I don't mean to incite any racism or anything like that," Mundine told Fairfax Media.

"I am just trying to make people aware and educate them because most of them don't know the story.

"The truth is, that anthem was composed in the 1800s when Aborigines were considered fauna. From 1901 to 1973 there was a White Australia Policy to make Australia white, and guess what the theme song of that policy was - Advance Australia Fair. So what are they really singing, Advance Australia White.

"I am a guy who has always stood up for what I believe in, and if people were educated on that and knew the facts they would say 'let's change it for the better - for all Australians'," Mundine said.

"I am not trying to divide people, I am trying to unite people. I have got white brothers, I have got white friends that I grew up with from school, but I want Australia to recognise the injustices and the wrongs, and it is an injustice that it still is the anthem.

"I want something that represents all Australians, not just something that represents the white Australia, which back in those days was very racist. There is still racism today but let's try to breed it out and move forward."

Last Thursday, a curt Mundine arrived at a public training session refusing to talk to media after The Daily Telegraph revealed his plans to boycott the anthem.

However television reporters closed on Mundine following his public sessions to ask if he "denied" the story.

"I got nothing to say, baby," Mundine said.

Asked again if he denied the story, Mundine again replied: "I got nothing to say."

Then asked if he would protest the anthem, Mundine said: "I may, I may not."

The open answer has thrown preparations into a spin, with nobody sure what Mundine plans to do.

Subsequently, nobody is sure what the reaction will be.

Already extra security has been hired to avoid the judges potentially being abused, as happened during their first fight, but they will now also be on heightened alarm when the anthem begins.

While Mundine is aware of the outrage it will cause not only ringside but around Australia, he is also acutely aware that the fight is being televised live across Australia and New Zealand and beamed on delay into America and the United Kingdom.

While its effect as a political statement will be debatable, he undoubtedly sees it as an opportunity to underline his role as an Aboriginal activist.

Last October he kicked off this fight with Geale by raising his concerns and, with the fight near, is revisiting his political statements about the plight of Aboriginals.

Mundine's camp believed they had convinced him to back down from plans to protest the anthem after conversations drifted back and forth on Wednesday, when Mundine began the day adamant he would carry through with the protest.

By the end of the day, though, he had begun to waver on his plans and Team Mundine believed he planned to drop the protest.

The to and fro continued last Thursday when Mundine arrived at the public training session and told the crowd over a microphone to ignore the newspapers.

"They're trying to sidetrack me, take me off my game because they know they're in trouble," he said.

Yet by the time he had finished training he was again clearly considering the protest, leaving everybody unsure what will happen on fight night.

Pay-per-views figures are expected to reach somewhere between 80,000-100,000 homes with thousands more watching in pubs and clubs.

With American Kimbo Slice on the undercard, a large pickup is expected overseas, commanding Mundine an audience of potential millions to make his point.

The threat has lit a fresh fuse ahead of Wednesday's world title fight, the first time two Aboriginals have fought for a legitimate world title.

Geale refused to be sidetracked, saying: "He has tried every little thing he can to try to throw me off my game, but no matter what he does it's not going to throw me off my game."

Mundine trained yesterday in a black T-shirt with an Aboriginal flag printed across the front.


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250,000 face night without water access

Torwood Street in inner-city Auchenflower was one of the few Brisbane suburbs to suffer notable flooding on Tuesday. Picture: Thomas Chamberlin Source: The Courier-Mail

BRISBANE residents can stop holding their breath - floodwaters have peaked and fallen short of causing serious damage in the River City. However, 60,000 people in Brisbane face the threat of no water overnight because of the earlier shutdown of the Mt Crosby Water treatment plant.

10.08pm: Brisbane City Council has stockpiled 40,000 one-litre bottles of water in case the taps run dry in seven suburbs.

9.45pm: GRAVE concerns are held for two workmates who are missing after a car was found fully submerged in flood waters near Gatton.

A 25-year-old man and a 34-year-old man failed to reach their destinations when travelling from Gatton to Mulgowie on Tuesday.

Crowds turned out to see the expected flood peak in the CBD at noon on Tuesday, but the river behaved itself.

The men were travelling to the same destination in separate cars, but at this stage it is not known if the men were travelling in convoy.

A Mitsubishi Magna which the 34-year-old man was driving was pulled from Sandy Creek near Glen Cairn this afternoon.

Police are still searching for the 25 year-old's Toyota Camry with registration number 425RWU.

Police and SES have stop searching for tonight and will be back out tomorrow morning.

Anyone with information on the whereabouts of either of the men should contact police or Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 00.

A view of the Eagle Street Pier area at about noon on Tuesday.

8.45pm: About 60,000 people in seven Brisbane suburbs face the threat of no water overnight because of the earlier shutdown of the Mt Crosby Water treatment plant.

Queensland Urban Utilities have named Tarragindi, Camp Hill, Carina North, Mount Gravatt, Tingalpa, Rocklea and Oxley as most at risk of losing supply however a spokesman said that was "very unlikely".

Brisbane City Council is organising stations in those suburbs to provide residents with bottled water. Water trucks will also be made available in those areas, in the event of a loss of supply.

A QUU spokesman said those suburbs would "be the ones to go in the unlikely event that we do lose supply".

"If that was the case we would be distributing bottled water and advising where those locations are," he said.

"However Mt Crosby has been partially recommissioned. While that's still running the position gets stronger and more secure.

Torwood St in Auchenflower at 10.30am on Tuesday. Picture: Thomas Chamberlin

"It's still running at reasonable capacity. If we can bring more of the plant online, the issues go away."

The Mt Crosby treatment plant predominantly supplies Brisbane's south side, but it is not clear why those suburbs are most at risk.

All Brisbane residents, as well as those in Logan, Ipswich, Redlands, Lockyer Valley and the Scenic Rim are urged to conserve water to minimise the supply issue over the next 24 to 48 hours.
 

7.00pm: ELECTIVE surgery and specialist outpatient appointments at one of Brisbane's biggest hospitals have been suspended until water supplies return to normal.

The Princess Alexandra Hospital was preparing to divert major trauma cases to the Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital tonight after the Mt Crosby Water Treatment Plant was shutdown because of turbidity caused by the flood.

The Brisbane River in the CBD on Tuesday.

Metro South Hospital and Health Service CEO Richard Ashby said about 30 elective surgeries and 2000 outpatient appointments, scheduled for tomorrow morning, had been cancelled.

He said he hoped hospital services would return to normal by lunchtime but this would be dictated by when ``the water situation returns to normal''.

"We're looking at a 16-hour potential interruption to our water utility,'' Dr Ashby said.

He said the hospital had "palette loads of drinking water'' for patients and staff and disposable bed pans to use until normal water supplies were restored.

"We have literally thousands and thousands of litres of bottled water here which will be more than enough,'' he said.

An RBWH spokeswoman said a decision would be made tomorrow morning about whether to cancel elective surgery at that hospital.

A view of the flooded Brisbane River from Toowong on Tuesday.

She said specialist outpatient appointments at the RBWH would go ahead as planned.
 

6.50pm: An updated list of school closures for Wednesday has been released tonight.

4.45pm: The majority of train services are expected to be back up and running by peak hour tomorrow, but commuters have been warned there could be delays and cancellations.

Some inner-city train services will resume this afternoon after the removal of scaffolding that fell on tracks at Fortitude Valley during high winds.

Two tracks have so far been cleared of debris, with the remaining two tracks expected to be back online for tomorrow morning's peak hour.

Sandbags are in place at Eagle Street Pier on Tuesday morning. Picture: Wallis Peter

It will allow a reduced number of services on the Gold Coast, Caboolture, Ferny Grove and Shorncliffe line to resume this afternoon.

Transport Minister Scott Emerson said it was expected 90 per cent of services would be back up and running by tomorrow morning.

Adjustments had also been made to clear fixed charges applied to Go Cards in cases where commuters could not touch off due to power failures.

4.05pm: THE Moreton Bay Regional Council's waste facilities will waive dumping fees until Monday, February 11, for disposal of tree and vegetation debris caused by the weekend's severe weather.

All council waste facilities will be open every day until the close of business on that day to provide greater access to residents and contractors.

A picture snapped in Bundaberg on Monday shows a group of school-aged children hastily being transported away from flood threatened areas. Schools were due to return across the state today, but there are widespread closures in the Bundaberg region. Picture: Facebook

Residents who engage a contractor to dispose of debris should ensure they are not charged fees while the council waiver is in effect.

3.18pm: HOMES have been flooded in Logan and residents are stranded - and the river continues to rise.

Long-term residents say it is the worst flood they have seen.

Around eight homes in Bayes Rd at Chambers Flat have up to 2m of water through them.

A dog breeder and her animals were marooned on the top floor of her high-set home, while neighbours evacuated.

A reader snaps a pic of the Brisbane River early on Tuesday morning, looking from Tennyson back toward the city in the distance. Picture: Simon Kern

They included Vaughn Catsicas, who fled in the darkness early on Tuesday morning as water engulfed his low-set home.

"There was no warning from the SES or anyone that the house was going to flood," he said.

"I managed to get my motorbike and a few other things out and now the place is underwater. And the water's still rising - it's come up about 10m since I got out."

The SES used a boat to evacuate other residents from nearby Wendt Rd at Logan Village.

The Logan City Council could not say how many homes had been flooded.

Morgan Ruig (front) helps other volunteers and friends and family help strip and empty houses in Milton, as people prepare their homes for the expected flooding tomorrow. Picture: Lyndon Mechielsen

2.35pm: SOUTHEAST Queensland residents have been urged to restrict water use to "drinking, cooking and washing" or face the prospect of running out over the next couple of days.

In an unexpected consequence of the heavy rainfall, the turbidity of the water is at such a level, the Mt Crosby water treatment plant has shut down.

It means about 225 megalitres of water will be available to the region, about half of what is normally consumed.

"I do stress that if people just keep using the water at the normal level of 450 megalitres a day there is a problem in some parts of the city, that the reservoirs on the hilltops could run dry and that locally people won't have water," said Premier Campbell Newman.

"So I appeal to the community to actually do everything they can to heed this message."

He said it was vital people did not use water for activities such as topping up pools, washing cars and cleaning paths.

A helicopter rescues a family at Fairmead on the Burnett River downstream of Bundaberg. Pic: Paul Beutel

High levels of soil from the Lockyer Valley have been washed into the water supply as a result of the heavy rain, leaving the Mt Crosby water treatment is unable to cope.

Mr Newman said it would be 24 to 48 hours before the water ran clean.

Lord Mayor Graham Quirk reiterated the water conservation appeal, and also invited Brisbane residents to put out green waste on footpaths by Sunday night, for collection Monday.

"We've also put in place provisions around food waste. There was of course power outages for a significant period of time," Cr Quirk said.

"There'll be about 50 food waste bins in 36 suburbs."

 2.30pm: The only sign of deep water at South Bank were those very words on a banner next to the lifeguard's chair, pointing to the pool of the man-made beach where tourists and families made the most of the sunny weather.

From about 10.30am, curious flood spotters gathered, wondering whether they would see history repeat itself.

For those who were there in 2011, watching the Brisbane River spread into the South Bank pools was something to remember. Fortunately, those memories were not refreshed yesterday.

Some people brought their lunch and made a picnic out of it. Others just kept an eye on the water level from the comfort of the pools.

At the river's peak, water lapped onto the grass near the low-lying footpath in front of the Brisbane Wheel but the rest of the walkway along South Bank remained high and dry.

2.05pm: THE waters have only just receded, but planning for the huge task of cleaning-up after the flood has begun.

Flood and damage in the town of Laidley. Pic Peter Wallis

Brisbane City Council has organised for special collections of green waste and food waste across flood-struck suburbs and will release details of collection times this afternoon.

Up to 100,000 homes across the city lost power during the storms, creating the problem of how to dispose of huge amounts of rotten food.

Ordinary garbage collection services will go ahead as normal, with only a few Brisbane roads still cut by water.

Brisbane City Council staff are working to clear 600 reports of fallen trees and debris in need of removal, which will take until at least Wednesday.

Lord Mayor Graham Quirk said while the city had seen the worst of the flood damage, residents should remain alert for the possibility of trees falling as a result of saturated grounds and the possibility for more high winds.

He said it was unlikely the clean-up would require the thousands of mud army volunteers as in 2011, but volunteers with specialist skills would still be needed. It will release more details about volunteer arrangements in the near future.

Council has asked for those wanting to make donations to help flood-affected residents to directly contact charity organisations.

Moreton Bay Regional Council will waive its dumping fees until February 11 for the disposal of tree and vegetation debris.

Residents who engage a contractor to help clear vegetation debris should ensure they are not charged dumping fees during that time.

Ipswich residents also will be able to dump green waste free of charge, while those with proof-of-address for a flood affected property will be able to dump all goods free of charge.

Meanwhile, Origin Energy has frozen the issuing of disconnection, overdue and late notices until it can assess the flooding situation and how it has affected billing.

1.50pm: There are currently 133,812 homes and businesses still without power in the southeast.

Energex is hoping to reduce that figure to 70,000 by 6pm tonight and 50,000 by 6am Wednesday.

More details can be found on their site here.

1.22pm: GOOD news for Keith Urban fans, with a new show scheduled for the Brisbane Entertainment Centre next Tuesday.

The Aussie entertainer cancelled shows on Sunday and Monday nights because of the severe weather.

1.10pm: THE Brisbane Markets at Rocklea have escaped significant damage after the Brisbane River peaked earlier today.

The markets, which were completely submerged in the 2011 floods, activated contingency plans after they were warned overnight of possible inundation.

George Lathouras, sales manager at produce vendor Murray Bros, said while they were prepared the impact will be minimal.

"We moved all produce into higher areas and evacuated some stock, but overall we've probably missed about 20 per cent of trading," he said.

The markets lost power from about 8pm Saturday night until 4am Sunday morning, however there was little damage to stock.

"We were pretty prepared after last time," Mr Lathouras said.

"But I still wasn't sure if I'd be selling apples or shovelling mud come this morning."

The markets will be fully operational again from Wednesday morning.

1.01pm: PRELIMINARY damage assessment for the Brisbane River flood peak is "looking very positive", according to authorities.

Queensland Fire and Rescue Service Acting Chief Superintendent for the Brisbane region Kevin Walsh said swift water rescue crews were in the process of collecting data.

"It's preliminary but all signs indicate there are no great areas of concern," he said.

"The flood levels are no greater than yesterday's levels.

"It's all looking very positive at the moment."

12.45am: AFTER days of rain and with dams in excess of 100 per cent capacity, Brisbane, Logan and Ipswich residents are in danger of running out of drinking water.

The region's main water treatment plant at Mt Crosby is currently offline because of record turbidity levels in the Brisbane River.

The high level of soil is the result of run-off from farmland in the Lockyer Valley into Lockyer Creek, which feeds into Wivenhoe Dam.

Premier Campbell Newman urged residents to heed the message to conserve water, with the problem not expected to be resolved for about 48-hours.

SEQWater CEO Terri Benson said the turbidity levels in the Brisbane River were four times the level experienced during the January 2011 flood event.

"While the Mt Crosby Water Treatment Plant is offline, Seqwater is using the Water Grid to move water from a number of different bulk water sources across the region, including the Gold Coast Desalination Plant," Ms Benson said.

"Seqwater is also managing the power, communication technology and site access issues at a number of sites across the region."

She said SEQWater was working closely with local councils and distribution retailer authorities to ensure "a balance was achieved between bulk water supply and demand".

"As a result of the large flows entering the region's water sources, a number of those sources are currently experiencing high levels of manganese," Ms Benson said.

"Manganese is a naturally occurring mineral and customers may notice discolouration and odour. It can also stain plumbing fixtures and laundry."

Residents in Brisbane, Logan, Ipswich, Redlands, Moreton Bay, Lockyer, Somerset and Scenic Rim were urged to conserve water for the next 24-48 hours.

12.25pm: RESIDENTS in Brisbane's western suburbs have been spared any flooding with high tides peaking lower than expected.

In Moggill this morning many people were watching the brown raging waters flow past the ferry terminal, which has been cut off by the flood.

In the Brisbane river at Bellbowrie three pontoons are floating free after breaking their moorings.

Fire fighters and SES crews are out surveying areas that had been predicted to be inundated by Brisbane City Council but their services have yet to be required.

College's Crossing is cut off by flood waters as is an area of Allard Close but no homes have been affected there.

12.22pm: PREMIER Campbell Newman is urging Brisbane residents to conserve water as a result of problems with the treatment plant.

A high level of soil in the Lockyer Creek, which flows into the Wivenhoe catchment, has caused the treatment plant to operate more slowly. More to come soon.

12.15pm: VODAFONE crews are working to restore mobile services across the state, with services now restored in Surfers Paradise and Currumbin.

Vodafone crews are onsite to repair the remaining outages at five sites on the Gold Coast.

Residents in Airlie Beach, Mackay, Deception Bay, Kingston and Mt Gravatt will need to wait another 24 hours for mobile services to be restored, as Vodafone crews wait on advice from emergency services as to when they will be able to gain access to flood affected sites.

Alexandra Hills and surrounds should expect to have services restored by 3pm this afternoon.

Vodafone has reported 40 single site outages across the state as a result of storm and flood damage.

Crews are working in impacted regions to restore services as soon as possible.

11.55am: FLOOD waters have caused some localised flooding near Brisbane's Breakfast Creek Hotel, with the swollen river spilling onto several streets in the area.

A taxi rank in the area has been affected, but the flood caused more issues yesterday by comparison.

11.50am: Firefighters are travelling between homes in flooded Torwood St in Auchenflower, checking on residents.

Anne Bolland, 43, said she was prepared for the rising waters today and had moved "everything" upstairs.

"This is the third time we have been flooded," she said.

Ms Bolland said water levels in the street were higher yesterday and didn't believe her home was damaged at this stage.

She said her husband was staying in their home keeping an eye on the rising waters.

"We still have power," she said.

Ivan Gaiko, of Vincent St, which runs into Torwood St, said the water levels today were about 6 inches lower than yesterday.

The 68-year-old said people from Nundah helped him move items above ground yesterday.

"The top of the windows were covered in 2011," he said.

He said most people kept items about 1m above the ground after the 2011 flood.

11.45am: WATER that lapped the city's river boardwalk has almost dried away in Tuesday's bright sunshine.

It was just after 11am that a small amount of water spilled onto the boardwalk in an isolated section.

Restaurants, including Groove train owner Julian Mero, are now looking forward to afternoon trading.

"We were ready for the worst but we're hoping to open this afternoon," he said.

11.28am: Brisbane City Council has advised residents of changes to public transport services due to severe weather across the city.

Most bus services are running as per normal, however 10 out of 260 routes have been affected by road closures.

Residents wishing to travel via bus are advised to log onto www.translink.com.au and plan their trip.

All CityFerry, CityCat and CityHopper services have been suspended until further notice.

11.27am: Wynnum residents look likely to be spared from further flooding today after Moreton Bay waters failed to reach Bayside homes.

Far calmer than yesterday, when it was spurred on by a driving wind, the waves lapped against rocks about half a metre below the Esplanade around midday.

An SES worker on scene said the water had likely reached it's highest point at 11am.

There are piles of seaweed and other debris to clean from surrounding streets but it was almost business as usual this morning.

11.23am: ENERGEX has warned residents of the Sunshine Coast's Glasshouse Mountains to be wary of scammers posing as employees and offering to lop trees for a fee.

ENERGEX reminds customers that employees wear an official uniform, carry photo identification and do not charge upfront for tree lopping services.

11.10am: TEARS ran down Jellyfish owner John Kilroy's cheeks as realised that his CBD riverside restaurant would be spared from a second flooding today.

"It's tears of joy - and sweat," he joked. "I was here until 2am last night and to wake up this morning and hear that it wouldn't be as bad today was a big relief.

"I think it's all over now."

Visibly exhausted, Mr Kilroy said the past 24 hours had been incredibly stressful.

"Now we just have drag all of the sandbags out and clean up. I don't think we'll be rushing though."

11.06am: Suncorp Insurance has received more than 4500 claims for compensation linked to the ex-tropical cyclone Oswald floods.

Numbers are expected to rise with flood levels across parts of Queensland still yet to peak.

Spokeswoman Michelle Barry said Suncorp would ensure all flood claims were speedily processed.

Suncorp has begun to send assessment crews to those regions hardest hit, including Bundaberg, to provide emergency start-up funds and claims assistance.

Flood-affected residents are urged to submit their claims as soon possible and provide as many photographs, receipts or ownership documents as possible to speed their claim.

The insurer was unable to provide an estimate of the financial cost of the 2013 floods at this stage.

10.54am: THE only flood hitting the Eagle Street Pier on Tuesday appears to made of people, as crowds of office workers come down to watch the expected peak at midday.

The Brisbane River has not risen enough to spill onto the boardwalk, although it has lifted about 10cm in the past hour.

The river remains swollen and littered with debris, which is proving a popular sight for the growing crowd.

10.50am: Water is rising at Torwood St in Auchenflower as the high tide approaches, however it is expected to be lower than yesterday's peak.

Both ends of the street remain blocked by police.

10.36am: THE mood at Eagle Street Pier in the Brisbane CBD remains markedly more relaxed this morning, as restaurants wait to see how high the river will swell.

Hidden behind a wall of sandbags and tarp, Jellyfish restaurant appears to be sealed tight, while the neighboring Riverbar has been blocked off by caution tape.

Inside, staff are visibly relaxed as they wait for the tide.

A little further down the pier, Groove Train, which was extensively damaged in 2011, also has sandbags in place.

Owner Julian Mero said that his staff worked until 11.30pm last night to secure the venue.

"The mood down here is very calm - I don't know if it's a false sense of security or if people have realised there's not much more we can do," he said.

"Yesterday the water came up higher than we expected, so it was a bit of a wake-up call and made us think that it (the 2011 floods) could happen all over again."

Mr Mero said that the river was predicted to reach 2.4m high.

"Our floors are 2.5m, so as long as the damage isn't too bad, we'll be open this afternoon."

It's been back to work for most of the city, with the occasional group of curious office workers popping down to look at the river.

10.27am: SIX hundred Goodna residents have been given the all clear to return to their homes after the Brisbane River peaked lower than expected.

The river peaked at 7.97 metres at 7.21am - a metre below the predicted level.

No homes were flooded despite earlier fears several hundred properties could be affected.

Local councillor Paul Tully said Goodna was the luckiest town in Australia.

"Now the task begins for everyone to start bringing all their gear back into their homes.

"Goodna residents are so grateful they were spared from another disaster."

10.15am: WITH 48,877 Brisbane homes still without power, New Farm's Gertie's Bar and Lounge is doing their bit to help their neighbours.

The Brunswick Street business posted a message on Facebook about 9.30am today, inviting people to charge their electronics this afternoon.

"Good Morning New Farm! Energex says there's a few of you without power. If any of you need to charge phones and laptops, even electric toothbrushes, Gertie will have extra power boards this afternoon for you to plug your bits in to," the message read.

There are currently 158,606 homes and businesses across the southeast without power.

9.56am: SOME Logan residents have evacuated as the Albert and Logan rivers flood, south of Brisbane.

And several have slammed what they say is a lack of communication from Logan Shire Council about the flooding.

Logan Village resident Tracy Newton said she and her family had left their Pioneer Drive home as floodwaters rose.

"Many Logan Village residents, like me, have been unable to tell what's going on with their home as the new flood maps have completely missed their streets," she posted on Facebook.

"We had four properties flooding into ours when we left yesterday and it was still rising - absolutely gushing in."

Another resident, Annalese Jack posted: " As usual, the region that was formerly Beaudesert council has been mostly forgotten by Logan (council)."

The Logan River at Maclean Bridge was due to peak at South Maclean at 3am this morning, at Maclean Bridge at 6am and Waterford at 4pm today.

9.54am: Banks have recorded issues affecting the ATM network and local branches around Queensland this morning.

Extreme weather and power outages have shut down more than 60 Westpac ATM's around the state and forced the closure of several local branches.

24 stores have been impacted in areas of Rocklea, Maryborough, Gympie and areas of Northern New South Wales.

A full list of closures is available here.

9.52am: SWIFT water rescue crews will be sent out during the flood peak period today to record the damage inflicted on Brisbane.

QFRS Acting Chief Superintendent for the Brisbane region Kevin Walsh said 18 personnel will document the flooding and pass it on to Brisbane City council.

"In the peak of the river levels (between 11am-12pm), crews will be sent out to take pictures of the areas of flooding to give to council," he said.

"This rapid damage assessment is the major activity at the moment."

He said there were no rescues in Brisbane overnight, though there were 28 calls for assistance because of the weather.

9.50am: THE Brisbane river is rising closer to the boardwalk in the CBD, with businesses and locals anxiously watching its progress.

While joggers and cyclists are treating the boardwalk as normal, the increasing tide is a reminder of what has been predicted to come.

The river is about 30cm from spilling onto the boardwalk.

Restaurants, including Jellyfish and Riverbar and Kitchen, have sandbagged in preparation, with workers standing by to reinforce these measures.

Amateur photographers have also travelled down to capture the high tide.

"We just came to see what had happened in our lunch break," one worker said.

"It doesn't look too bad now but we'll see at 11, I guess."

9.26am: Brisbane residents have been advised to conserve water usage due to high silt and reduced levels of potable water supplies.

Brisbane City Council said residents were also advised to avoid excess hosing of external areas of their homes to conserve water usage.

9.17am: The concert by Celtic Thunder at Brisbane entertainment Centre tonight (Tuesday) has been cancelled because of the flooding.

Leon Spellson from Nine Live, promoter of the tour, said: "We are extremely disappointed that Celtic Thunder cannot perform for their Brisbane fans, but these circumstances are unfortunately beyond our control."

Ticket funds are through Ticketek. If tickets were purchased by Visa or Mastercard credit card, a refund will be automatically processed to the card.

8.40am: A DEFENCE Force C130 airfcraft has landed at Bundaberg to begin evacuating patients from the Bundaberg Base Hospital as the city braces for a peak flood in the Burnett River this afternoon.

8.35am: The department of Education, Training and Employment has released an updated list of schools closed today due to flooding. Find the complete list here.

8.30am: MARYBOROUGH police are looking for a mystery man last seen clinging to a tree in flood water in Queen's Park.

The man was spotted by members of the public swimming in flood water at 7.37pm Monday between the Maryborough Court house and Lennox St.

Police confirmed swift water rescue were called to the scene but were unable to locate the man in the darkness.

Emergency services, including QFRS crews, were notified this morning and have joined the search in an effort to locate the now missing man.

8.02am: EMERGENCY services are rushing to Queens Park in Maryborough where a person is reportedly stuck in a tree.

A Queensland Fire and Rescue spokeswoman said they were awaiting information but swift water rescue crews and police had been deployed.

7.21am: The SES received around 3,400 calls for help during the past 24 hours with the majority of callers in the state's central, north coast and southeast.

Volunteers have been kept busy with jobs relating to evacuations, flood assistance, sandbagging, leaking roofs, roof damage and fallen trees.

Meanwhile, swift water rescue crews were called to seven incidents overnight and are reminding people, "if it's flooded, forget it".

7.13am: GOLD Coast and Brisbane airports remain open although some disruptions and delays still persist.

Virgin Australia has confirmed many domestic flights within Qld and NSW today have been cancelled. A full list is available on their website.

All effected passengers booked to travel today will receive a text message to contact the airline and re-arrange flight times and routes.

Brisbane airport remains unaffected but is advising passengers to contact their airline for further information about anticipated flight delays or disruptions to services.

The Airport Train service has been suspended. A bus shuttle will operate between the CBD and airport for customers travelling between the airport and Brisbane CBD.

7.07am: Preparations are under way to evacuate patients at Bundaberg Hospital, amid fears the hospital could soon lose power or flood.

The Burnett River continues to rise to an expected record peak of 9.5m this afternoon.

6.55am: THE wild weather may have eased but floodwaters and debris are continuing to cause problems for motorists this morning.

At least 100 roads remain partially blocked or closed because of the fall-out, including one of the entrances to the Airport Link.

At 3.30am Tuesday, the Department of Transport and Main Roads said the Sandgate Rd entrance was closed between Station St and Wood Street.

Debris is blocking the entrance in both directions and motorists have been told to use an alternative route until it is cleared.

Jay Lane from the Australian Traffic Network said traffic flow was generally light across Brisbane but he expected this could change as people gain confidence to venture out.

As well as fallen powerlines and trees, he said there are many traffic lights malfunctioning across the city due to the power outages.

Motorists should be aware of:

* A large gum tree that has pulled down powerlines at Ruthven Street, Corinda.

* Tree and branch debris at Beatty Road, Archerfield (near Boundary Rd).

* Massive trees across the road at Oxley Avenue, Margate.

6.16am: BRISBANE residents woke to fog as they brace for expected flood peaks later this morning.

Flood Hydrologist Jess Carey from the Bureau of Meteorology said the first peak will occur around 11am in Brisbane city, as the high tide brings an expected peak of 2.6m.

Brisbane's Western suburbs are still expecting low level flooding.

Peaks are projected to reach 10m at Moggill and 6m at Jindalee.

But the worst appears passed at Ipswich as waters continue to recede, expected to return to normal by Thursday.

Ipswich's Bremmer River currently sits at 13.25m and is falling.

Goodna, badly flooded in 2011, is breathing a sigh of relief as the region escapes serious flooding with little-to-no effect recorded by Bureau Hydrology.

Bundaberg, Maryborough and the Logan River still remain areas of concern.

6.07am: People across Brisbane returning to work today have been advised to delay travel on public transport during peak hours, with trains functioning on an ad-hoc basis.

All stations on the rail network are open except for Fortitude Valley, where debris has caused disruptions to the power supply.

Trains have been diverted between Roma Street and Bowen Hills via the Exhibition line, but there is a shuttle train service linking Roma Street and Central, a Translink spokesman said.

"This has been in place from this morning as we are trying to make sure people can get to Central and access areas," he said.

"The trains are not running on a particular time table but they leave fairly consistently as demand requires them.

"People should expect delays and travel off-peak if possibly to ease the burden on the rail network."

The spokesman added buses were operating as normal around Brisbane's CBD despite a few minor diversions.

"There is a high frequency of services and buses will run through the major corridors," he said.

5.48am: EVEN as good news begins to trickle in for the southeast, the worst is yet to come in Bundaberg as flood levels continue to rise.

Flood Hydrologist Jess Carey from the Bureau of Meteorology said the Burnett River in Bundaberg is yet to peak as water still moves through the system from upstream.

The Bureau is predicting the river to peak at 9.5m, more than 0.4m higher than initially projected.

Mr Carey said Bundaberg residents are likely to see flood waters remain high for the next couple of days but should see levels drop by the weekend.

He said there is also a major concern as flooding moves through the Logan River, south of Brisbane, later tonight but could not confirm the expected peak for the region at this stage.

5.30am: AROUND 167,000 homes are currently still without power in the southeast after 50,000 properties were reconnected overnight.

Four hundred Energex crews will work through Tuesday to restore more homes and are hopeful improved weather conditions will assist their efforts.

Their focus will be hospitals, sewerage and water treatment, major roadways, schools without power, and then urban and rural customers.

Crews will keep a close watch on the river levels in case the rising floodwaters impact underground power supplies.

Almost one in four homes has had power disrupted since the wild weather first hit the region about midday Saturday.

There are still 56,000 power outages in Brisbane, 22,700 on the Gold Coast and 19,700 in the Logan area.

5.20am: FLOODING in Ipswich peaked much lower than anticipated but police warn the southeast is not out of the woods yet.

Ipswich Police confirmed no houses in the community west of Brisbane have been flooded at this stage but locals should remain on alert.

Flood waters have reportedly begun to subside quite dramatically after the Bremmer River peaked around 9.30pm Monday at 13.9m, much lower than the 15m peak earlier projected.

Police confirmed there are still a number of road closures and traffic lights out in the area.

5am: One of the suburbs worst hit during the 2011 floods, Goodna, east of Ipswich, appears to have avoided any repeat of that devastation during this latest weather event.

Local councillor Paul Tully contacted ABC radio shortly before 5am to report that no houses in the low-lying area had flooded overnight.

He warned residents not to celebrate early or consider returning their belongings to their properties, as it was possible that water levels could again threaten during high tides in the next 24 hours, but he was cautiously optimistic.

The news was being interpreted as a possible indication of what to expect downstream in Brisbane, where parts of the city are bracing for flood waters.

1.37am: There are currently 180,000 homes without power in southeast Queensland, with 50,000 reconnected overnight.

Energex has a target of reconnecting another 100,000 by Tuesday night.

There are still 22,000 homes without power on the Gold Coast.

Some affected suburbs are without any lights at all, including street and traffic lights. Others are partially powered.

Check energex.com.au for more detailed information - including restoration estimates - but there is no guaranteed restoration schedule because of the extent of the repair work.

On ABC Radio, Energex representative Nathan Hatch thanked the company's customers for their patience as repairs continue across the network after significant damage done by the high winds.

Mr Hatch said hinterland and hard-to-access areas would remain the biggest challenge to Energex crews.

1.05am: The Brisbane River at Moggill is experiencing a 9.5m peak, while nearby Jindalee is peaking at 6m, about 7m below the 2011 flood level.

Logan is expected to peak at Waterford Bridge at  8m on Tuesday afternoon.

The Brisbane River is expected to peak at 2.6m about 11am Tuesday. Multiple smaller flood peaks above 2m will coincide with high tides until at least Thursday.

Further north, the Burnett River at Bundaberg is sitting at a record 9.3m. Flows are relatively steady but will increase until levels peak late Tuesday or early Wednesday. The December 2010 flood level at Bundaberg was 7.92m.

12.18am: Floodwaters have receded in many inner-city suburban streets in Brisbane which were flooded Sunday night or Monday morning.

Water in the area around Northey St, Windsor, which last night saw heavy inundation with dozens of homes evacuated, has retreated, with only a few roads left partially closed.

Flooding has also diminished in the western suburb of Rosalie, where evacuations took place earlier today.

12.00am: Ipswich residents looked likely to miss the worst of the flooding as the expected flood peak in the Bremer River was revised down from 15m to 13.8m.

Ipswich Mayor Paul Pisasale said he was "hoping for 14m, not 15m, which would save hundreds of properties" when the river was expected to peak some time before midnight.

He said it was possible that fewer than 200 properties in the Ipswich area would be affected but that it would nevertheless be a long night

11.30pm: Lord Mayor Graham Quirk warned that 1500 homes, 2100 units and 1250 businesses in Brisbane's river suburbs could be affected by expected flooding.

The Brisbane River is expected to peak at its highest level of 2.6m about 11am Tuesday.

The weather bureau said smaller flood peaks are expected on Wednesday and Thursday.

Meanwhile, residents in other parts of the state are also bracing for the impact of recent downpours.

Residents in Ipswich are watching the Bremer River which is sitting at 13.85m and is expected to peak sometime Monday night.

Bureau of Meteorology Hydrologist Jess Carey said that flows are slowing and they are hopeful that the river will not reach the predicted 15m peak.

In Logan, peaks are expected on Tuesday afternoon.

Further north, the most recent measurements in Bundaberg have the Burnett River at 9.3m.

The water level is expected to build into Tuesday.

Mr Carey said that the expected peak is impossible to predict and even small rises are hurting those in the area.

Earlier: The Brisbane River will seep into the CBD at lunchtime Tuesday while residents and business owners further upstream brace for more water.

In Bundaberg, authorities will keep worried eyes on the rising Burnett River, which yesterday threatened to take lives and wash away homes.

Authorities warned of 40-knot floodwaters set to swamp North Bundaberg, prompting a frantic airlift of residents already cut off.

Last night, authorities were coming to terms with a weather event that had the southeast on its knees. The knock-on effects included:

* Bundaberg hospital evacuated with 60 patients transferred to Brisbane.

* Flooding in Brisbane's CBD and in some suburbs inundated two years ago.

* Flooding in a string of cities and towns including Ipswich, Bundaberg, Maryborough, Gympie, Laidley and Mundubbera.

* A warning that Rockhampton would record a major flood this weekend.

* The state's worst power outages, affecting 283,000 properties.

* A crippling of the passenger train network with cancelled services and the forced closure of Central, Fortitude Valley and Bowen

* Hills stations for at least the next two days.

* The closure of more than 200 schools for today's return of the school year.

* A shutdown of the Telstra network in north Queensland, crashing all Triple-0 calls, which was rectified last night.

* The forming of a Joint Task Force by the Defence Force to respond to flooding problems.

* Confirmation of four deaths after an accident that left a three-year-old boy dead and injured his mother in Gordon Park.

Premier Campbell Newman said: "We are tough, we know what this state can throw up, we choose to live here, and it is a great place, and we will do it, we will get through this."

He said Bundaberg faced a "grave situation" with extra police heading there to help the city of 70,000 people, as well as an Australian Defence Force taskforce.

"These are record floods and we are, as many people have said, in uncharted territories," Mr Newman said.

"I have a heavy heart too but we must stand up and get right into this."

He refused to speculate on the cost of the widespread disaster, or the impact on Queensland's bottom line.

"I know the Federal Government will be giving us financial assistance, as they did last time," the Premier said. "But the first thing is to get through this flood, to make sure people are safe. That's my focus."

Brisbane's biggest test is expected to come today, with an 11am river peak coinciding with the high tide.

An unprecedented shutdown of three of the city's busiest train stations will test workers as they return to work after the long weekend.

Central, Fortitude Valley and Bowen Hills stations are all out of action, as a result of loose scaffolding slicing through four overhead wires near Brunswick Street.

Transport Minister Scott Emerson said there were simply not enough buses to carry train commuters, unless they travelled out of peak times.

Citycat services have also been suspended due to river flooding, leaving buses as the only public transport option for CBD workers.

Almost a quarter of a million homes were still without power last night across the southeast.

Adding to the woes, was a Telstra outage caused by damage to fibre optic cables at Kingaroy and Colosseum that cut phone access in central and north Queensland.

Police confirmed the death of a 60-year-old man at Greenbank, who had ridden into floodwaters on a motorcycle.

A 30-year-old mother suffered a broken leg when she was struck by a falling tree at Gordon Park while looking at swollen Kedron Brook with her toddler son. He was in hospital in a critical condition with severe head injuries.

Federal Treasurer Wayne Swan was reluctant to comment on the prospect of another flood levy to help pay for the damage.

Other towns in strife were Laidley - where more than 100 people spent last night in an evacuation centre - and Rockhampton, which is counting down to a weekend flood of the Fitzroy River.

Mr Newman reminded residents to give "generously" to the Queensland Flood Appeal.


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Floods recede as states count cost

About 7500 people have been displaced in Bundaberg as it contemplates a recovery from the flood disaster.

CENTRAL and southern Queensland face a mammoth recovery task as record-breaking flood waters recede.

Thousands of people have been displaced as rivers and creeks, swollen by torrential rain from ex-tropical cyclone Oswald, rose up and inundated homes and businesses on Monday and Tuesday.

In the worst-hit city of Bundaberg, 2000 homes and 200 businesses were inundated when the river reached a record height on Tuesday afternoon.

More than 7500 displaced residents are seeking refuge in evacuation centres or with friends and family on higher ground.

Queensland Premier Campbell Newman toured Bundaberg on Tuesday and urged Queenslanders to aid disaster victims.

"They all need our support. We've got to reach out and help them now," he said.

Mr Newman also paid tribute to the resilience of residents, who in some cases have weathered four floods in three years.

"It's incredible to see the spirit of Queenslanders out on the streets of their cities and towns as they grapple with what is a big crisis."

The news was better for residents of Brisbane and Ipswich in the southeast, where water levels peaked lower than expected.

Early indications are that water stayed below floorboard level in Brisbane, while about 35 homes in Ipswich had water in their living areas.

A boy has died after a tree fell on him and his mother, bringing the death toll from the flood emergency to four.

It was a world away from the disaster of January 2011.

Then, tens of thousands of homes in the southeast were inundated and Brisbane's damage bill ran into the tens of millions.

In coming days the city's key challenge will be to maintain water supplies after the flooding forced the shutdown of two processing plants.

Residents have been told to limit water use around the home until further notice.

As the flood waters recede, attention will turn to the huge damage bill and recovery task.

The premier says Bundaberg will be the focus and has arranged for 400-500 soldiers to help clean the city up.

Already 9,800 insurance claims have been lodged in Queensland worth a combined $116 million, according to the Insurance Council of Australia.

The damage to infrastructure is still being assessed but it's been estimated the bill will still reach the hundreds of millions, without counting crop and livestock losses.

The Queensland premier is urging people to donate to the government's Queensland Flood Appeal which is being coordinated with Red Cross.

SES sandbagging near Grafton's Clarence River on Tuesday. Picture: Nikki Short

Prime Minister Julia Gillard and Governor-General Quentin Bryce are expected to visit flood-affected regions in Queensland in coming days.

In NSW, Grafton dodged a bullet when floods "never seen by white man" peaked just 2cm below the northern NSW town's levee wall.

After 2000 people evacuated their homes and prepared for the worst, the raging Clarence River peaked at 8.08m, its highest mark in recorded history and just short of the level that could have caused widespread devastation.

"It does appear as though the worst of it is over," NSW Premier Barry O'Farrell said.

Mr O'Farrell jointly announced with Prime Minister Julia Gillard the declaration of 10 local government disaster areas to unlock federal and state funds for flood-hit families and businesses.

The Insurance Council estimates about 2000 claims worth $10 million have already been lodged in NSW.

Concerns remain for some towns downstream, including Yamba, Ulmarra and Maclean, but Mr O'Farrell said he was delighted the river level had gone down to 7.95m and was still dropping.

"Now we are in recovery mode," said State Emergency Services commissioner Murray Kear, as the low-pressure system responsible for the severe flooding in Queensland and NSW moved off the coast.

NSW escaped the loss of life suffered in Queensland, although 50 people had to be rescued and 3500 called for assistance, mainly around Grafton.

Bronte Beach in Sydney being hammered by the wild weather. Picture: John Grainger

"It is serious. We need people to conserve water."

WHERE TO TURN TO FOR HELP AND INFORMATION

NSW:

Government Flood Information

Ministry for Police and Emergency Services

Rising water in the Clarence river is expected to test levee banks around Grafton

NSW flood warnings

Queensland:

Guide to essential services

QLD flood warnings

Brisbane city council flood maps

The Manly ferries had a hard time seeing the swells in the Sydney Harbour. Picture: John Grainger

Houses on the Clarence river in Grafton this morning. Picture: Nikki Short

Emergency crews in Penkivil St, Bondi, after a five-stoery high tree fell down outside an apartment building. Picture: Spielman Photography

A man and woman make the most of the foam on the Sunshine Coast. Picture: www.brandonrooney.com

A helicopter rescues a family at Fairmead on the Burnett River downstream of Bundaberg. Pic: Paul Beutel

RAW FOOTAGE: Sections of the John Muntz Causeway in Queensland are completely submerged as the flooding continues.


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Brisbane's Riverbar now under water

Written By Unknown on Senin, 28 Januari 2013 | 22.54

From masterchef to mud army, nervous business owners are helped by volunteers as Brisbane's river breaks its banks, threatening the CBD.

MATT Moran's Riverbar and Kitchen has flooded only six weeks after opening its doors on the promenade level of Eagle St Pier in Brisbane's CBD.

The Sydney-based chef posted a picture of the flooded restaurant deck this morning with the caption, "#riverbar living up to it name! Devastated".

During the opening party for Riverbar in December, Matt Moran and co-owner Peter Sullivan stated that flooding "wouldn't be an issue" for the venue. Neighbouring restaurant Jellyfish, which went under during the 2011 floods, is unaffected at this stage.

An hour earlier, Moran had tweeted that staff were doing their best to sandbag the property in an effort to protect it from rising waters.

"Back prep kitchen is flooding @RiverbarKitchen just glad everybody is safe! Sand bagging!," he tweeted.

Masterchef contestant and Jellyfish head chef Rhett Willis says the Eagle Street pier restaurant will be inundated, but not as bad as in 2011.

"Sadly it's happening! And will get worst! Flooding #riverbar," he had tweeted earlier today along with a picture of soggy sandbags.

Riverbar spokeswoman Caitlin O'Loan said the restaurant had experienced minor flooding.

"Everything is under control,'' she said.

Matt Moran's Riverbar and Kitchen has flooded as the Brisbane River keeps rising.

"There hasn't been any damage but the restaurant won't be open for a few days.

"We've moved all the furniture and we'll wait to see what happens at midnight - we're not fearful of what's to come.''

Jellyfish owner John Kilroy said he and his staff "were praying like crazy".

"We're getting ready for the next tide at 10pm tonight," he said.

"We just managed to avoid flooding with the tide this morning; the water didn't quite come to the door, but we're more worried about tonight.''

Celebrity chef Matt Moran has tweeted these images of rising waters from his new venture Riverbar and Kitchen. Picture: Twitter/@chefmattmoran

Mr Kilroy said that this morning's high tide was much higher than predicted, and that he was working with council to estimate how high the river will rise tonight.

"There are still marks on the wall from the 2011 floods that are well above my head - we can't predict how high it will get this time, but we've put in flood gates and sandbags, sealing it all up and move the stock.''

Jellyfish head chef Rhett Willis is currently a contestant on MasterChef : The Professionals.

Angelica Jolly, co-owner of the nearby Alchemy restaurant, said the SES had informed her that floodwaters are expected to be higher than the 2011 floods.

"We've been told to stay here and wait for advice," she said. "We're very concerned.''

Ms Jolly said there was a high chance her restaurant on Eagle St Pier would be flooded.

Cameron Hann, Riverbar's general manager, is surrounded by sandbags as the clean-up operation begins. Picture: Sharnee Rawson

"It's a bad nightmare,'' she said. "I've been contacting my three best friends: builders, solicitors and insurance people.''

Heavy leaking from the ceiling has already inundated the restaurant and caused extensive damage, she said.

"Two years ago, we were shut down due to water coming from underneath; this time it's from above -  most of the ceiling will have to be ripped out.'' 

Strong winds have caused extensive damage to Moda restaurant on Edward Street  in Brisbane's CBD, ripping heavy glass windows off their fixtures, owner Javier Codina said. 

Bystanders wade through floodwaters outside the Jellyfish restaurant on Eagle St Pier. Picture: Sharnee Rawson

"A massive window has been completely bent and come off the walls - thank God it landed on the table and chairs and didn't smash or there would be glass everywhere,'' he said.

Mr Codina said that rising drain water was more of a worry than flood water from the river.

"We had to wait almost three hours for sandbags at Newmarket, and have secured all of the drains and toilets," he said.

"The carpark at the Stamford Hotel has been evacuated and all of the cars are on the street. The restaurants on Eagle St are finished.'' 

Sandbags line Matt Moran's restaurant Riverbar and Kitchen on Brisbane's Eagle St Pier. Picture: Sharnee Rawson

- with Reshni Ratnam
 


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