Sydney dust storm sparks flight chaos, health worries
A woman takes a photograph as the Sydney Opera House (C) is shrouded in an eerie blanket of dust yesterday. Sydney's cars and buildings turned orange as strong winds blew desert dust across the city, snarling commuter and air transport and prompting a warning for children and the elderly to stay indoors. Photo: AFP
Australia's worst dust storm in 70 years blanketed the heavily populated east coast Wednesday in a cloud of red Outback grit, nearly closed the country's largest airport and left millions of people coughing and sputtering in the streets.
No one was hurt as a result of the pall that swept in overnight, bringing an eerie orange dawn to Sydney, but ambulance services reported a spike in emergency calls from people with breathing difficulties, and police warned drivers to take it easy on the roads.
Dust clouds blowing east from Australia's dry interior parched even further by the worst drought on record covered dozens of towns and cities in two states as strong winds snatched up tons of topsoil, threw it high into the sky and carried it hundreds of kilometres.
International flights were diverted from Sydney to other cities three from New Zealand were turned around altogether and domestic schedules were thrown into chaos as operations at Sydney Airport were curtailed by unsafe visibility levels.
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