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Australian coastal towns wind- and wave-battered

AP, TULLY, Australia: The most powerful storm in a century ripped
across Australia's northeast coast early Thursday, blasting apart
houses, laying waste to banana crops and leaving boats lying in the
streets of wind- and wave-swept towns.

Authorities said they were surprised to learn at daybreak that no one
had been reported killed, but cautioned that bad news could eventually
emerge from communities still cut off after the overnight storm, which
left several thousand people homeless.

Emergency services fanned out as to assess the damage across a
disaster zone stretching more than 190 miles (300 kilometers) in
Queensland state, using chain saws to cut through trees and other
debris blocking roads.

Cyclone Yasi was moving inland and losing power Thursday. But
drenching rains were still falling, adding woes to a state where
Australia's worst flooding in decades has killed 35 people since late
November.

Hundreds of thousands of people spent the night huddled in evacuation
centers or bunkered in their homes as the cyclone hit, packing howling
winds gusting to 186 mph (300 kph) and causing tidal surges that
swamped coastal areas.

"Nothing's been spared. The devastation is phenomenal, like nothing
I've ever experienced," David Brook, the manager of a resort at
Mission Beach, where the core of the storm hit the coast around
midnight, told Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio.

"Vegetation has been reduced to sticks," said Sgt. Dan Gallagher, a
Mission Beach police officer.

At Tully, about 12 miles (20 kilometers) inland along the storm's
path, the main street was littered with twisted pieces of metal that
were once house roofs and jagged shards of glass from shattered
shopfront windows. Queensland state Premier Anna Bligh said one in
three houses in the town of 3,500 people either were demolished by the
storm or had the roof ripped off.

Click image to see photos of the cyclone aftermath


AP Photo/Rick Rycroft

Tully and Mission Beach were among a handful of towns in a relatively
narrow band that bore the brunt of Yasi's fury as it stormed ashore.

Further south, emergency workers had cut their way into the coastal
community of Cardwell on Thursday morning and found older houses
wrecked and boats pushed up into the town, she said. The entire
community was believed to have evacuated before the storm.

The main coastal highway was a slalom course of downed trees and power
lines, surrounded by scenes of devastation: Roofs peeled back from
houses, fields of sugar cane and banana shredded and flattened,
once-green expanses stripped to brown soil.

Tidal floodwaters periodically cut the highway Thursday, temporarily
stranding convoys of people trying to return home to see what was
left.

Barbara Kendall sat in her car next to her meowing cats Loly, Blossom,
Spingle and Junior. Kendall and her husband David spent a sleepless
night in a basement parking garage in Innisfail after being evacuated
from their coastal home at Kurrimine Beach.

"It was really terrifying, but we were safe," she said. "It's a
terrifying sound. It's really hard to describe. All I could hear was
the screeching of the wind."

The trunk of her car was filled with her most essential items:
photographs, heirlooms and precious jewelry.

Electricity supplies were cut to more than 180,000 houses in the
region — a major fruit and sugarcane-growing area and also considered
a tourist gateway to the Great Barrier Reef — and police warned people
to stay inside until the danger from fallen power lines and other
problems was past.

As the day wore on, authorities allowed more than 10,000 people to
leave the 20 evacuation centers where they stayed overnight.

"I'm very relieved this morning, but I do stress these are very early
reports," Bligh said of the information that no one had been killed
overnight. "It's a long way to go before I say we've dodged any
bullets."

Ahead of the storm, Bligh and other officials said the storm was more
powerful than any that had struck the coast since 1918, and warned the
country to expect widespread and destruction and likely deaths.

Amid the chaos, a bit of happy news: a baby girl was born at a Cairns
evacuation center just before dawn with the help of a British midwife
on holiday, councilor Linda Cooper said.

The largest towns in the path of the cyclone, including Cairns and
Townsville, were spared the worst of the fierce winds. Trees were
knocked down, but few buildings were damaged, authorities said. But
Townsville was suffering widespread flooding.

Officials said it was too early to cite a total cost of the damage,
but it was sure to add substantially to the $5.6 billion the
government says already was caused by the earlier flooding.

Queensland officials had warned people for days to stock up on bottled
water and food, and to board or tape up their windows. People in
low-lying or exposed areas were told to evacuate. Bligh credited the
preparations with saving lives.

Australia's huge, sparsely populated tropical north is battered
annually by about six cyclones — called typhoons throughout much of
Asia and hurricanes in the Western hemisphere. Building codes have
been strengthened since Cyclone Tracy devastated the city of Darwin in
1974, killing 71 in one of Australia's worst natural disasters.