
© AFP/Pool, Brad HunterMajor flooding hit parts of Australia's east on Friday, stranding thousands of residents.
Sydney - Major flooding hit parts of Australia's east on Friday, stranding thousands of residents, prompting a military airlift and leaving some communities only accessible by helicopter.
The deluge, which has sparked dozens of rescues and left about 7,275 people isolated in various parts of New South Wales state has also impacted Queensland to the north where homes have reportedly been inundated.
"From the air it looks like an inland sea," New South Wales Premier Barry O'Farrell said after visiting the region.
Evacuations have been ordered from some houses and businesses in the New South Wales town of Moree, where more than 600 people have registered with an evacuation shelter as the Mehi River peaked, the State Emergency Service said.
"The town of Moree is inundated with water -- so north Moree is not only cut off, but many of the properties there are flooded," O'Farrell said.
"As you fly over the centre of the town there are streets that look like canals that have more relevance to Venice than north western New South Wales."
A Royal Australian Air Force C-130 Hercules aircraft was moving bedding to Moree, as locals sandbagged buildings against the Mehi and rising Gwydir river as the water hit levels not seen in decades.