June 16 (Reuters) – Indonesia’s meteorological agency lifted a tsunami warning that was issued after a magnitude 7.0 quake struck off Papua province on Wednesday. (Reporting by Sunanda Creagh; Editing by Sara Webb)
Magnitude 5.7 quake strikes southern California
June 15 (Reuters) – A magnitude 5.7 earthquake struck a remote part of southern California, near the border with Mexico, the U.S. Geological Survey reported on Monday.
The quake was centered about 5 miles (9 km) southeast of Ocotillo, California, and occurred at 0426 GMT, the USGS said. It was felt in San Diego on the western coast of California, a witness said.
There were no immediate reports of damage or injuries.
(Reporting by Peter Henderson, Writing by Paul Simao; Americas Desk; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani)
Magnitude 5.7 quake strikes southern California
June 15 (Reuters) – A magnitude 5.7 earthquake struck a remote part of southern California, near the border with Mexico, the U.S. Geological Survey reported on Monday.
The quake was centered about 5 miles (9 km) southeast of Ocotillo, California, and occurred at 0426 GMT, the USGS said. It was felt in San Diego on the western coast of California, a witness said.
There were no immediate reports of damage or injuries.
(Reporting by Peter Henderson, Writing by Paul Simao; Americas Desk; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani)
Haiti welcomes World Cup as trauma therapy
PORT-AU-PRINCE, June 10 (Reuters) – Soccer-mad Haitians are revving up to watch the World Cup on large-screen televisions at makeshift camps, their first collective therapy since the devastating January earthquake that killed up to 300,000 people and left more than 1 million homeless. In the crowded camps in the Haitian capital and other quake-stricken areas, people say they are ready to watch the World Cup even though Haiti’s team did not qualify for the month-long event that starts on Friday in South Africa.
“I lost everything I had in the disaster and I can’t help thinking about how miserable my life has become,” 36-year-old Jean-Marie Sannon told Reuters on Thursday.
Sannon stood under a makeshift tent in an overcrowded camp in the Champ de Mars area near what remained of the presidential palace that collapsed in the magnitude 7 earthquake that hit on Jan. 12.
He said that if Brazil wins he will be happy for the rest of the year.
“I probably would have become crazy if the World Cup were not organized this time around,” Sannon said. “But if Brazil is champion, I’ll spend the rest of the year celebrating even without a dollar.”
The government and several national and foreign sponsors have set up giant screens in popular areas, around tent cities and elsewhere to help residents watch the games.
“During the World Cup I probably will continue to go hungry and to face all the problems I have been facing, but I don’t think I’ll have time to think about that,” said 27-year-old Norluck Moreau.
“I’ll be watching the games,” said Moreau, listening to a sports broadcast from a small radio. “The World Cup is the greatest therapy I could ever have and I’ll enjoy it to the fullest.”
FUN AMID DISASTER’S AFTERMATH
The Minister of Culture and Communication, Marie Laurence Jocelyn Lassegue, said at least 137 municipalities had received two large-screen television sets and one generator each, to make sure soccer fans can watch the competition.
“We have made sure television stations around the country received the satellite signal so that they may carry the live transmission of the World Cup,” she said. “It is a good thing that they can watch this together and have some fun.”
The director general for the National Telecommunications Council, Marcelin Montaigne, said the government has provided funds to the state-run national television station to help it establish relay stations throughout the country to make the games available to as many people as possible.
The communication director for the U.N. peacekeeping mission, David Wimhurst, said two giant screens have been set up in the capital’s stadium to allow about 10,000 people to watch the games every day.
“People will have to pay 10 Haitian gourds (about 25 U.S. cents) to watch the games. They pay this small fee just to help control the crowds,” Wimhurst said.
The money will be given to the Haitian soccer federation to help families of players killed in the earthquake.
Haiti’s only participation in a World Cup was in 1974 in Munich and the Haitian national team was eliminated in the first round.
Brazil, Argentina, Italy, France, Germany and Holland are respectively the foreign sides with the most fans in Haiti. There has been a growing support for the South African side and other African teams, particularly when playing against other sides that are not on the Haitian’s favorite list.
“My team is Argentina, Messi is the world’s best player and Maradona was a phenomenon as a player and he will surprise as a coach. So watch out!” said 40-year-old Joanne Lucien.
(Editing by Jane Sutton and Xavier Briand) (For the Reuters World Cup website go to: www.reuters.co.uk/worldcup)
Magnitude 4.6 quake hits China
Beijing, June 6 (IANS) An earthquake measuring 4.6 on the Richter scale hit China’s Shanxi province, but there was no report of any casualty, the China Earthquake Networks Centre said.
The quake occurred at 8.58 p.m. Saturday. Its epicentre was 38.2 degrees north latitude and 112.7 degrees east longitude, at a depth of five km, Xinhua reported.
Magnitude 6.4 quake hits off India’s Andamans: USGS
(Reuters) – A magnitude 6.4 quake struck east of India’s Andaman Islands and triggered a local tsunami warning, the U.S. Geological Survey and Pacific Tsunami Warning Center reported on Monday.
World | Natural Disasters
The USGS said the quake struck at 1:21 a.m. on Tuesday (3:51 p.m. EDT on Monday) 75 miles east of Port Blair at a depth of 79.4 miles.
“Earthquakes of this size sometimes generate local tsunamis that can be destructive along coasts located within a few hundred kilometers (miles) of the earthquake epicenter,” the tsunami warning center said.
(Reporting by Sandra Maler; Editing by Peter Cooney)
Magnitude 6.4 quake hits off India’s Andamans – USGS
May 31 (Reuters) – A magnitude 6.4 quake struck east of India’s Andaman Islands and triggered a local tsunami warning, the U.S. Geological Survey and Pacific Tsunami Warning Center reported on Monday.
The USGS said the quake struck at 1:21 a.m. on Tuesday (1951 GMT on Monday) 75 miles (120 km) east of Port Blair at a depth of 79.4 miles (127.7 km).
“Earthquakes of this size sometimes generate local tsunamis that can be destructive along coasts located within a few hundred kilometers (miles) of the earthquake epicenter,” the tsunami warning center said. (Reporting by Sandra Maler; Editing by Peter Cooney)
“Heartbroken” Ajmal says Hussey’s final over onslaught will forever haunt him
Islamabad, May 18 (ANI): Pakistan’s stunning loss to Australia in the semi-final of the ICC World T20 Championship at the Beausejour Stadium, St Lucia has left off-spinner Saeed Ajmal ‘heartbroken’.
Chasing a challenging 192 for victory, Australia needed 48 runs from the last 18 deliveries.
Skipper Shahid Afridi threw the ball to the trusted Ajmal to bowl the final over of the match with the Kangaroos still needing 18 more runs.
Pakistan looked all set to reserve a berth in the final of the T20 World Championship for the third consecutive time. But Mike Hussey had some other ideas. He smashed Ajmal for three sixes and a four in the final over to register a breathtaking win over the defending champions.
Hussey’s merciless hitting is still playing on Ajmal’s mind, as he has still not been able to cope with the heavy defeat.
“When Hussey hit the last six I was absolutely heartbroken, I am still heartbroken. It was a very emotional and difficult time for me. My teammates all came up to me and consoled me and told me not to worry, but I was very upset. The pain is there, when you lose a game of this magnitude it hurts really badly,” Ajmal told PakPassion.net.
Ajmal, who boasts an economy rate of only 6.24 in the slam bang version of the game, said that it was pre-planned that he would be bowling the final over of the match and that he had his own game plan ready.
“The first delivery was perfect, it was what I had planned, it was a perfect yorker to Johnson and it only went for a single. However then the wind seemed to pick up and I was bowling into the wind which made me lose my line and length,” he said.
Ajmal, however, did not deny Hussey the credit for his stupendous show in the all important tie.
“It was an amazing innings, you have to give Hussey a lot of credit for playing that sort of innings in such an important match at such a crucial time,” he said.
Now that the tournament is over, Ajmal says he is already looking at doing better in the upcoming tournaments.
“The best way for me to get over this match is to start playing cricket again, get the ball in my hand and to start bowling again. Thankfully the Asia Cup is not far away and I am looking forward to playing in that tournament in Sri Lanka. I have faith in my ability and I am confident that I can bounce back after the match in St Lucia,” he said.
But the question is would Ajmal bowl the final in a crunch match again?
“Of course I would,” is his answer. (ANI)
Kendra Wilkinson’s sex tape due for May release
Washington, May 06 (ANI): Former Playboy bunny Kendra Wilkinson Baskett’s sex tape will be released at end of this month, it has emerged.
However, Kendra is fighting for its release.
“Kendra’s attorneys are currently evaluating and pursuing Kendra’s rights with respect to the purported video and any third parties involved in the possible sale, reproduction or distribution of the same,” her reps confirmed to OK! Magazine.
The company Vivid Entertainment is said to have obtained Wilkinson’s videotape and are planning to release it at the end of this month under the Vivid-Celeb imprint, reports Fox News.
Steven Hirsch, founder/co-chairman of Vivid said, “We know that Kendra has millions of fans and we feel that it”s rare to find well-produced, hardcore footage of a star of her magnitude.
“The tape was brought to us by a third party and after consulting with our attorneys, we are confident in our right to distribute it. We”ve been trying to reach Kendra but have so far been unsuccessful, We therefore made the decision to release ”Kendra Exposed” to stores across the country by the end of May.”
Kendra’s partner in the video is yet to be named, according to Vivid Entertainment. (ANI)
“Boobquake” doesn’t spark off earthquake!
Melbourne, April 28(ANI): Cleavages don’t make the earth move — literally.
That’s the claim of a blogger, who called on women around the world to test the premise of an Iranian cleric who suggested that immodest women were to be blamed for earthquakes.
“Women who do not dress modestly…lead young men astray, corrupt their chastity and spread adultery in society, which increases (consequently) earthquakes,” Hojatoleslam Kazem Sedighi had said.
Dubbed Boobquake, Jen McCreight encouraged women around the world to flaunt their breasts and their cleavage to prove the Iranian cleric wrong.
“Our provocative dress didn”t really seem to effect the frequency of earthquakes,” News.com.au quoted McCreight as writing on the Blag Hag blog.
She added: “There were 47 earthquakes on the 26th, which falls well within the 95 per cent confidence interval for number of earthquakes (about 0 to 148).”
An earthquake that occurred in Taiwan was considered in the study, but it wasn’t enough to affect the results.
McCreight said: “That single earthquake wasn”t significant. Earthquakes between 6.0 and 6.9 magnitude happen, on average, 134 times a year.
“That means we had about a 37 per cent probability of an earthquake of that magnitude happening on boobquake just due to chance alone.”
McCreight admitted that the experiment was more of a “humorous exercise” than a rigorous study.
She said: “Maybe God really was pissed, but he couldn”t increase earthquakes for us because that would provide proof for his existence. Or of course, maybe God is just biding his time.
“If you hear a news report in the next couple weeks saying a bizarre Indiana earthquake killed a science blogger, well then maybe we”ll have to rethink our conclusions a bit.”
McCreight believes humour can often work against sexist attitude.
She said: “I think people were fed up with ridiculous anti-science and anti-women claims like the one made by Sedighi, and sometimes light-hearted mockery is the best solution.” (ANI)
Western Australia shaken by largest earthquake in 50 years
Perth, Apr 20(ANI): Western Australia’s Kalgoorlie city was on Tuesday rocked by the biggest earthquake to hit the region in 50 years, damaging several buildings and causing the Kalgoorlie gold mine to be evacuated.
A 5.0-magnitude tremor struck about 8.20a.m. local time (23.20GMT), but so far there have been no reports of injuries.
Geoscience Australia seismologist, David Jepsen, said the quake hit about 10 kilometres southwest of Kalgoorlie and was fairly shallow.
“People in Kalgoorlie would have experienced strong shaking. We would expect people up to several hundred kilometres away would have felt it,” News.com.au quoted Jepsen, as saying.
He added that aftershocks would be of much lower magnitude and should be of no concern.
Kalgoorlie Consolidated Gold Mine spokeswoman Holly Phillips said that all employees had been evacuated from the Super Pit.
“We have evacuated Mt Charlotte and open pit while our geo tech team go in to assess,” Phillips said.
“It was pretty scary all round. Our roof didn”t cave in but it sustained a bit of damage. It was a significant boom. It was really loud,” she added.
Kalgoorlie Consolidated Gold Mines Super Pit is the largest open pit gold mine in Australia.
The worst-hit buildings were historic structures in Boulder, a remote town which sprang up in the wake of Australia’s 1800s Gold Rush. (ANI)
Magnitude 7.1 quake hits Solomon Islands – USGS
SYDNEY, April 11 (Reuters) – A major quake of magnitude 7.1 struck the Solomon Islands on Sunday, the U.S. Geological Survey reported, but there no immediate reports of casualties or damage.
USGS said the quake’s epicenter was 32.2 miles (52 km) deep, 60 miles (97 km) southwest of the Solomon Islands’ Kira Kira in the Pacific Ocean. It hit at 8:40 p.m. (0940 GMT).
Officials at the Solomon Islands Broadcasting Corporation, contacted by telephone from Sydney, Australia, said they had not heard of any deaths or damage but that some residents on a nearby island had fled to high land fearing a tsunami.
The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said the quake, initially reported as a magnitude 7.5, could “generate local tsunamis that can be destructive along coasts located within 100 kilometers (62 miles) of the earthquake epicenter.”
A magnitude 7.1 quake can cause widespread, heavy damage. (Reporting by Sydney newsroom and Sandra Maler in Washington) (Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
Magnitude 7.1 quake hits Solomon Islands – USGS
WASHINGTON, April 11 (Reuters) – A major quake of magnitude 7.1 struck the Solomon Islands on Sunday, the U.S. Geological Survey reported.
It said the quake’s epicenter was 32.2 miles (52 km) deep, 60 miles (97 km) southwest of the Solomon Islands’ Kira Kira in the Pacific Ocean. It hit at 8:40 p.m. (0940 GMT).
The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said the quake, initially reported as a magnitude 7.5, could “generate local tsunamis that can be destructive along coasts located within 100 kilometers (62 miles) of the earthquake epicenter.”
A magnitude 7.1 quake can cause widespread, heavy damage.
(Reporting by Sandra Maler)
Positive Hardwick focusing on way forward
The magnitude of the task facing first-year Richmond coach Damien Hardwick was clear for all to see during Saturday night’s loss to Sydney at the SCG.
The Tigers were totally outclassed in all areas, taking almost 50 minutes to kick their first goal and ending up on the wrong end of a 16.15 (111) to 7.14 (56) hiding.
So it was bold and somewhat surprising to hear Hardwick even mention the prospect of a drought-breaking Richmond premiership being anywhere on the horizon.
He knows it is still a long, long way away, but he certainly seems up for the fight of turning a once-proud club that has become virtually a laughing stock back into one of the AFL’s elite.
“We’ve got a plan. We know where we’re at and we know where we’re going,” he declared when asked if Richmond’s troubles are bigger than he anticipated when he took the job.
“For us it’s all about getting that 11th premiership. So next week’s game is another learning curve and another step forward.
“We started this process with the end in mind and we’re working our way back towards that.”
The team’s next game is an MCG clash with Melbourne on Sunday.
While it was put to Hardwick as a possible wooden-spoon showdown, the Demons have shown more than Richmond so far, following a one-point loss to Collingwood with a victory over Adelaide on Sunday.
On the plus side for the Tigers, teenager Dustin Martin stood out against the Swans, while the likes of Trent Cotchin and Daniel Jackson have already shown they have the talent to become accomplished AFL players.
The contest was over at half-time when the Swans led by 52 points, but the Tigers held their own to some extent after the break, losing the second half by just three points.
“To their credit I think the second half was pretty even,” Sydney coach Paul Roos said.
“They came back and tested our guys.
“They’ve got some good players and they’re going to get better and better.”
Despite their obvious troubles, having started the season with three heavy defeats, Hardwick has already seen some encouraging signs.
“We’ve got a game plan we’re trying to implement both offensively and defensively and when we get that right the results will come thereafter,” he said.
“Every time we go out there we learn something about this group and how they play.
“We’ve got a fair way to go. I thought we took another step forward this week and I think our fans will have seen some fairly exciting players.
“Next week is another chance for our players to learn.”
Crumbling city hall reopens for 80th birthday
Brisbane City Hall celebrates its 80th birthday today but concerns remain about who will foot the bill for its $215 million refurbishment.
The building is closed for major repairs but will temporarily reopen today for birthday celebrations.
The landmark building opened in 1930 but in recent years it began to crumble.
It was closed in December to allow for $215 million worth of structural, electrical and safety repairs.
Deputy Council Opposition Leader Milton Dick says ratepayers have not been told where the money is coming from.
“Currently looking at a shortfall of about $185 million,” he said.
A committee has been set up to raise funds but Lord Mayor Campbell Newman says at this stage he cannot say how much has been donated.
“At the end of the day the restoration bill will be presented to people in an open and transparent way,” he said.
He says more funding details will be revealed in the council budget.
Councillor Newman says the $215 million restoration project is progressing well.
“When visitors today go through City Hall on a free guided tour they’ll see a forest of scaffolding in the central auditorium that goes right up to the top dome,” he said.
“It’s quite spectacular and it shows the magnitude of the work and the effort required to actually deal with the problems in this building.”
Tsunami alerts lifted after major Indonesia quake
A major earthquake of 7.7 magnitude struck off the coast of Aceh on the Indonesian island of Sumatra on Wednesday triggering panic and power blackouts, although a tsunami alert was later lifted.
Neighbouring Thailand and Malaysia, lying east of Sumatra, also cancelled tsunami warnings.
A Reuters photographer in Sinabang on Simeulue island, south of Aceh, said that electricity was cut in the area and that he saw four injured people, including a child with a head wound who had been hit by fallen masonry.
Aceh Governor Irwandi Yusuf said earlier there had not been reports of damage or casualties so far.
“I am on the coast now, some people had gone to take refuge on higher ground but now they have returned to their homes,” Yusuf told Metro TV.
The resource-rich island of Sumatra is an important supplier of commodities such as rubber, palm oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG), but there were no immediate reports of delays in shipments because of the quake.
The quake, which struck around 5:15 a.m. (2215 GMT), was centred 200 km (125 miles) west-northwest of the coastal town of Sibolga and was at a depth of 31 km, the U.S. Geological Survey said. The epicentre was around 215 km from Medan, the largest city on Sumatra.
There were at least three aftershocks after the initial major quake.
ELECTRICITY POLES SWAY
The Hawaii-based Pacific Tsunami Warning Center initially warned the quake could generate a local tsunami, but later cancelled its tsunami watch, saying: “Sea level readings indicate that a significant tsunami was not generated.”
An official from Indonesia’s meteorology agency said a tiny tsunami of only 3 cm (1 inch) had been detected at Sinabang and lifted its own tsunami warning.
A Metro TV reporter in the Sibolga area of North Sumatra said that he fell off his motorbike when the quake struck and the force left electricity poles swaying for minutes afterwards.
Tremors from the quake were felt in Dumai, in Sumatra’s Riau province about 1,100 km from the epicentre, Indonesia’s Antara news agency reported.
Hamid Sarong, a resident of Aceh’s provincial capital Banda Aceh, which was devastated by a tsunami in 2004, said that the quake was felt while people in the staunchly Muslim province were at dawn prayers, although there was no panic.
Sumatra lies along the Pacific “Ring of Fire”, one of the world’s most active seismic faultlines, and is frequently hit by earthquakes.
In December 2004, a magnitude 9.15 quake off Aceh triggered an Indian Ocean tsunami that killed about 226,000 people in Indonesia, Sri Lanka, India, Thailand and nine other countries.
A 7.6 magnitude quake struck last September off the city of Padang, southeast of Wednesday’s epicentre, killing more than 1,000 people.
(Additional reporting by Ed Davies, Telly Nathalia and Olivia Rondonuwu in Jakarta; Editing by Alex Richardson)
Mexico-California border towns shaken after quake
Dozens of aftershocks following a big earthquake rattled the Mexico-Californian border area on Monday as families too scared to return to damaged homes milled around in streets and parks.
Two people died and more than 200 were injured when a 7.2 magnitude quake rocked the area near the border city of Mexicali on Sunday. Baja California Gov. Jose Osuna said the victims were crushed by a collapsed house and a falling wall.
The tremor, felt as far north as Los Angeles, cracked main roads, toppled electricity posts and knocked down an empty multistorey car park under construction in Mexicali, a prosperous industrial city and busy border crossing.
A pastor in the farming town of Guadalupe Victoria near the quake’s epicenter said his church remained standing but cracked down the middle two hours after he finished giving mass.
He and about 40 members of his congregation slept in a soccer field and were shaken by nearly 100 aftershocks.
“We spent the night praying here in the park. There have been constant tremors and no one wants to go back home,” said pastor Fernando Lopez.
Broken gas pipes sparked fires on Sunday, and darkened streets in Mexicali caused car accidents, but no major buildings collapsed. Power was mostly reestablished on Monday, but some hospitals lay patients out on beds in parking lots due to worries over cracked walls.
Osuna said 3,500 people would be moved to shelters and noted that the full extent of damage in towns south of Mexicali like Vicente Guerrero was not yet known.
Smaller tremors continued to shake buildings, adding to fears of another big quake.
“With the number of aftershocks we’ve had, the likelihood of another 6 or 7 magnitude earthquake is very real,” Erik Pounders, a geologist at the U.S. Geological Survey, said.
“There might be a few structures that just barely made it through and the second one could be the straw that breaks the camel’s back.”
LONG LINES FOR GAS
A highway connecting Mexicali with the nearby border city of Tijuana on the Pacific coast was ruptured by a crevice at least a meter (3 feet) deep, according to a Reuters witness.
A liquefied natural gas import terminal south of Tijuana was not damaged however, operator Sempra Energy said.
President Felipe Calderon will visit Mexicali, home to more than a million people and a center for food processing and assembly plants, later on Monday.
Vacationers returning from Easter holidays were stuck in traffic jams and motorists reported difficulty finding fuel, even though state oil company Pemex said supply was fine.
Sunday’s quake was centered in a lightly populated area but rattled nerves in the United States and across Latin America which has been shaken by devastating earthquakes in Haiti and Chile this year.
Over the border in the U.S. town of Calexico, some downtown blocks were closed off as Border Patrol agents helped police secure the area against looters. Stores had leaning awnings, smashed windows and broken vases in window displays.
“It was violent, like the earth was mad … My home was shaking very violently, pictures coming off the walls, then the TVs came down,” said local firefighter Channing Dawson.
Earthquakes of 7.0 can do serious damage to urban areas.
Some parts of San Diego reported minor structural damage and callers to local radio said the rolling tremor made it hard to keep cars on the road. In Los Angeles, buildings swayed.
Southern California with its many geological faults is prone to frequent quakes and many residents fear the next big one. The last to cause major damage was the 6.7 magnitude Northridge quake in 1994 that left 57 dead and 9,000 injured.
(Additional reporting Mica Rosenberg and Veronica Sparrowe in Mexico City; Writing by Catherine Bremer and Mica Rosenberg, editing by Alan Elsner)
Small earth tremor reported at Frankston
Geoscience Australia says a small earth tremor has been recorded near Frankston, south-east of Melbourne.
Several callers have reported the tremor to a Melbourne radio station.
Geoscience Australia says the 2.3-magnitude tremor was recorded in Pearcedale, 47 kilometres south-east of Melbourne.
Perth’s big clean up
Two days after the storm that rocked Perth, the magnitude of the clean-up confronting households, businesses and institutions is now starting to set in.
For some businesses the cost of the damage is yet to peak. Others are unsure whether they can continue operating from their storm-ravaged premises.
Clayton Arnold owns a furniture business in Osborne Park. His warehouse was damaged by hail smashing through the roof.
The storm destroyed some of his stock, and ruined the tools of his trade – his sewing machines.
“It (the storm) only lasted about 10 minutes but the damage could be anywhere up to $400,000,” he says.
With no work in the short-term, Mr Arnold yesterday told his 40 factory workers to take an early Easter break as he attempts to save his warehouse.
He remains optimistic and if the electrician gives the green the light, he hopes to re-open just after Easter.
Around the corner from Mr Arnold’s shop is an educational supplies store also hit hard by the storm.
General Manager Daniel Rohr says his shop was inundated with water.
“We practically had a waterfall coming down the middle of the store,” says Mr Rohr who describes the amount of water as being ‘ankle deep’.
The floor is destroyed and there is a horrible odour from the water damage. Up to half of his stock is ruined but the biggest concern is the state of the shop’s asbestos roof which the storm punched holes through, making the building unsafe to work in.
Mr Rohr has had to close the outlet and salvage as much stock as possible.
He will transfer the stock to a separate warehouse which he hopes to open this weekend.
Up the road, the news could be even worse for a furniture and homewares supplier. The force of the storm ripped off half of its roof, causing extensive damage to the showroom and stock.
Over at Crawley, glaziers are removing irreplaceable leadlight and glass from the University of Western Australia’s Winthrop Hall.
The greenkeepers are removing fallen trees and branches and the grounds are returning to some semblance of normality.
However the ground floor of the Education, Fine Arts and Architecture Library is still flooded with water and sand as the University considers just how to remove the debris.
Here too, the impact of cost of the storm is yet to be determined.