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Western Australian residents forced to flee as cyclone brings destruction

The holiday town of Exmouth has already felt Tropical Cyclone Narelle's renewed force, with emergency services personnel expecting "significant damage."

A rain-battered town in Western Australia is lashed by high winds and heavy rain from Tropical Cyclone Narelle. The town street depicted is deserted and covered in debris.

Towns like Onslow in Western Australia's north have been affected as Tropical Cyclone Narelle swept back toward the coast. Source: AAP / Justin Hayes

In brief:

  • Tropical Cyclone Narelle has re-intensified off the the northern coast of Western Australia.
  • It will sweep south along the coastline over the next few days, bringing damaging winds and heavy rain.

An isolated town's evacuation centre has been abandoned and roofs ripped off as a dangerous cyclone cuts a swathe through coastal communities.

Homes have been flooded by driving rain, with reports of boats sunk as Cyclone Narelle slides down Western Australia's northwest coast, unleashing gusts strong enough to shake buildings.

Holiday town Exmouth, 1250km north of Perth, felt the full force of Narelle's fury overnight, with the category four storm generating winds in excess of 250km/h.

"The really destructive core passed just west of Exmouth, and it has been severely impacted," Department and Fire and Emergency Services Commissioner Darren Klemm said on Friday.

"We're expecting some pretty significant damage out of this."

Police and members of the defence force are moving about 50 people to a local church after the roof of the town's evacuation centre was damaged.

"No reports of injuries at this time," Klemm said.

Power has been lost in the town of about 2800 people, with emergency crews holed up due to the dangerous conditions.

"The eye of the cyclone has passed Exmouth but the town is still being impacted and it's likely to stay at emergency warning until the middle of this afternoon," Klemm said.

Narelle was heading south near Coral Bay as a category three storm on Friday afternoon and was expected to make landfall and pass to the east of Carnarvon in the afternoon.

The storm is likely to weaken to a category two system once it's over land, but residents in Kalbarri and Geraldton have been warned they could still be impacted by damaging winds into the early hours of Saturday.

"The worst of the winds will be in areas near and to the east of the cyclone's track," meteorologist James Ashley said.

Exmouth Shire president Matthew Niikkula said roofs had lifted off houses and many others were flooded.

"Not a person in town would have got any sleep last night ... screaming winds, lots of bangs, everyone's house shaking, sitting in the dark with their candles or their torch," he said.

"It's a really, really terrifying experience."

Exmouth local and digital creator Craig Kitson said trees and fences had been toppled near his home, and there were reports of boats sunk in the marina and a significant storm surge impacting the town.

"People have lost their houses from what I've heard, and there's people that have definitely lost their roofs ... anyway you look at it, it's a significant impact," he said.

Tourism operator Murray Pattison's family evacuated from the town on the last flight to Perth.

He has been holed up in a concrete home with friends and said it was a wild night as the cyclone passed the town.

A photo of a flooded main street in Katherine. Cars are still able to pass through the water, though it appears one small car has become stranded in a deeper patch. A nearby petrol price tower sits half submerged.
Tropical Cyclone Narelle only recently battered towns like Katherine in the Northern Territory's Top End, one of the longest-running cyclone's in decades. Source: AAP / Jas Streten

"It's been howling and roaring," he said.

"We're very fortunate. I've just got a bit of water coming in, but there are people who have had roofs come off, houses completely flooded.

"Hopefully, we can just get to the other side of this and band together as a town and help those who need it."

Narelle reformed from a tropical low after leaving a trail of destruction across parts of Queensland and the Northern Territory.

It's the first time a cyclone has hit the three jurisdictions since Ingrid made three crossings in 2005.

The system is set to weaken as it moves southeast on Saturday and passes east of Perth before moving out over the Southern Ocean.

Heavy rain is forecast for Perth, but severe winds are unlikely.


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4 min read

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Source: AAP



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