Australia

Black Caviar: 19 wins in a row, now Britain bound

BRISBANE, Australia -- Peter Moody was standing around some of Australia's best thoroughbreds at his soggy stables in Melbourne, but had time to take a telephone call inquiring about one of them.

As usual, it was about Black Caviar.

Families flee as floods swamp Australia's southeast

SYDNEY -- There was good news Tuesday for Wagga Wagga, the city in southeast Australia that had braced for its worst flooding in 159 years.

The swollen Murrumbidgee River peaked below the height of the New South Wales farming town's protective levee.

The 11-meter defenses held steady as the river rose to 10.56 meters, below the record set in 1853 and below the level in 1974 when the last big flood hit town.

But the 9,000 people ordered out of their homes after a week of record-breaking rain will not be allowed back until officials give the all-clear.

Azarenka routs Sharapova to win Australian title

MELBOURNE, Australia -- Victoria Azarenka started celebrating, then suddenly did a double-take to ask her coach, "What happened?"

The answer: She had just produced one of the most lopsided Australian Open final victories to capture a Grand Slam title and the No. 1 ranking for the first time.

Azarenka routed three-time Grand Slam winner Maria Sharapova 6-3, 6-0 in 1 hour, 22 minutes on Saturday night, winning 12 of the last 13 games after dropping her first service game and falling behind 2-0.

"It's a dream come true," she said. "I have been dreaming and working so hard to win the Grand Slam, and being No. 1 is pretty good bonus. Just the perfect ending and the perfect position to be in."

(Sam Upshaw Jr./The Associated Press) Paul Douglas Peters, left, of Sydney, Australia, is escorted from the Federal Courthouse in Louisville, Ky., after he was arraigned in connection with a bomb hoax in Australia.

Australian 'collar bomb' victim relieved at arrest

SYDNEY — An Australian teenager who spent 10 hours with a fake bomb chained to her neck said Wednesday that she is relieved the FBI has arrested a man accused of breaking into her home and tethering the device to her as part of an elaborate extortion plot.

(Courtesy photo) Leah Aston poses for a photo in a flooded Queensland, Australia, neighborhood recently.  Her sister, Amanda Harris, of Eden, is collecting donations to help the Aston family clean their home after it was inundated with floodwater.

Eden woman's sister in Australia seeks cleaning supplies after flood

Leah Aston is still looking for a broom or a mop she can buy. Her home in Ipswich, Australia, still needs a lot of cleaning after being inundated during the devastating floods that hit last month, but store shelves there remain bare.

Scores missing in tsunami-like flood in Australia

BRISBANE, Australia - Greg Kowald was driving through the center of Toowoomba when a terrifying, tsunami-like wall of water roared through the streets of the northeast Australian city.

Office windows exploded, cars careened into trees and bobbed in the churning brown water like corks. The deluge washed away bridges and sidewalks; people desperately clung to power poles to survive. Before it was over, the flash flood left at least 10 dead and 78 missing.

"The water was literally leaping, six or 10 feet into the air, through creeks and over bridges and into parks," Kowald, a 53-year-old musician, told The Associated Press on Tuesday. "There was nowhere to escape, even if there had been warnings. There was just a sea of water about a kilometer (half a mile) wide."

The violent surge in Toowoomba brought the overall death toll from weeks of flooding in Queensland state to 20, a sudden acceleration in a crisis that had been unfolding gradually with swollen rivers overflowing their banks and inundating towns while moving toward the ocean. Queensland Premier Anna Bligh said there were "grave fears" for at least 18 of those missing.

New storms soak flood-weary Australian communities

BRISBANE, Australia -- Cleanup crews toiled under more pounding rains Thursday to clear mountains of debris in flood-ravaged communities across northeastern Australia, as one mayor warned it could take his city up to a year to recover from the worst flooding in decades.

Officials were only beginning to see the scope of the damage as river levels across Queensland state started dropping despite new thunderstorms. Floodwaters were expected to stay high in many areas for at least another week, and officials warned evacuated residents to stay far away from their waterlogged homes.

Flooded Australia city faces long wait to dry out

Australia put an army general in charge of flood recovery efforts Wednesday after weeks of heavy rains deluged the country's northeast, crippling the area's economy, including the coal mining industry.

Floodwaters have forced most of Queensland state's coal mines to shut and some may not restart production for months, ministers said at an emergency Cabinet meeting in Brisbane, the state capital.

The Associated Press
In this image provided by the Rockhampton Regional Council, the Fitzroy River bursts its banks at Rockhampton, Australia, Tuesday, Jan. 4, 2011. Residents of Rockhampton, cut off by some of the country's worst flooding in decades are being warned to stay out of the water, and not just because of the risk of being swept away: Debris, snakes and even crocodiles could also pose a danger.

Australian city cut off by floods braces for more

ROCKHAMPTON, Australia -- Floods that have cut air, rail and road links to an Australian coastal city are now threatening its sewage plant, and waters are still expected to rise another few feet before peaking Wednesday.

Residents of Rockhampton made their way in boats through waters that reached waist-high in some areas Tuesday but were warned not to wade into the them since snakes and crocodiles could be lurking.

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