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More than 10,000 people were sheltering in 20 evacuation centers, including one set up in a shopping mall in downtown Cairns, a city with a population of some 165,000. People huddled in hallways with blankets, camping chairs and snacks. Earlier Wednesday, police told people to get off the streets of Cairns. "Everyone's gotta go now," one officer told pedestrians strolling near the waterfront. "The water is coming NOW." Warnings stretched as far away as Townsville, which is slightly larger than Cairns and about 190 miles (300 kilometers) to the south, and Mount Isa, some 500 miles (800 kilometers) inland. State disaster coordinator Ian Stewart said people should move to rooms at the center of their houses
-- usually the bathroom -- as they were structurally safest and usually had no windows that could shatter. People should bring mattresses and other items to hide behind in case of flying debris, sturdy shoes, and raincoats in case roofs are ripped off. Carla Jenkins, a 23-year-old Cairns resident, threw her belongings into a suitcase, taped up the windows of her house and fled to her grandmother's sturdier apartment complex with her sister and her dog, Elmo. The women had a stash of candles, flashlights, water and tinned food, and planned to spend the night huddled in the bathroom away from the windows. "I can't see many Cairns people sleeping tonight," she said. "Tonight's going to be a very scary night." The timing of Yasi's expected landfall, just after high tide, meant high storm surges of at least 6.5 feet (2 meters) were likely to flood significant areas along the coast, the weather bureau said. Australia's huge, sparsely populated tropical north is battered each year by about six cyclones
-- called typhoons throughout much of Asia and hurricanes in the Western Hemisphere. Building codes have been strengthened since Cyclone Tracy devastated the city of Darwin in 1974, killing 71 people, in one of Australia's worst natural disasters. ___ Online: Bureau of Meteorology:
http://www.bom.gov.au/cyclone/index.shtml
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