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Australian residents begin evacuating ahead of cyclone

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Australian residents begin evacuating ahead of cyclone
WATCH: Evacuations are underway as a powerful cyclone slams Australia’s northeast coast. Cyclone Debbie has intensified into a category 4 storm, packing winds close to 200 kilometres per hour. – Mar 27, 2017

Thousands of people began evacuating low-lying areas of Australia’s tropical northeast on Monday as a powerful cyclone bore down on the coast.

Cyclone Debbie was expected to cross the Queensland state coast along a sparsely populated 100-kilometre stretch between the towns of Ayr and Bowen early Tuesday, Australian Bureau of Meteorology forecaster Michael Paech said.

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The cyclone was churning over the Pacific Ocean as a Category 3 storm on Monday, with wind gusts up to 165 kilometres per hour. It was expected to intensify to a Category 4 storm with wind gusts up to 260 kph per hour when it crosses on to land, Paech said.

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Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk urged people in the most vulnerable areas to evacuate on Monday before conditions deteriorate.

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She said the farming region had never experienced a storm stronger than Category 2, which packs wind gusts of between 125 and 164 kph . Older homes would not withstand a Category 4 storm, Palaszczuk said.

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“This window of opportunity to leave is drastically closing,” Palaszczuk told reporters. “I am just pleading to everyone, please, listen to authorities. I do, you must as well. This is about your safety, it is about the safety of your family and the safety of your children.”

People were being bused out of low-lying areas ahead of a tidal surge that could be as high as 4 metres (13 feet), Palaszczuk said.

The storm late Monday morning was about 375 kilometres (230 miles) east of Townsville, a coastal city 90 kilometres (55 miles) north of Ayr.

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