Home Blog World News Australia news live: NT residents warned ‘crocs absolutely everywhere’ as Katherine and Daly rivers flood | Victoria
Australia news live: NT residents warned ‘crocs absolutely everywhere’ as Katherine and Daly rivers flood | Victoria

Australia news live: NT residents warned ‘crocs absolutely everywhere’ as Katherine and Daly rivers flood | Victoria


‘There are crocs absolutely everywhere,’ NT police say, warning people not to go in flooded rivers

Penry Buckley

Penry Buckley

Gill has called on people not to venture into floodwaters, following reports of people swimming in rivers. Asked if there is increased crocodile activity in flood-affected areas, he said:

double quotation markThere are crocs absolutely everywhere … Please don’t go in the water. The message is quite clear. Don’t swim in the water for two reasons. It’s because it’s a fast flowing river, and also this is when crocs are most active.

Asked about reports that residents in Katherine were unable to contact emergency services, Gill said he does not have details of specific incidents, but said the advice remains to call triple zero. Earlier he said there had been “telecommunications issues” alongside power outages.

Speaking alongside Gill, the Bureau of Meteorology’s Jude Scott said the Daly River could stay at major flood level for some time:

double quotation markThe Daly River is a huge river holding enormous volumes of water, so it will continue to slowly rise during the next week. And at this stage, we’re expecting it to stay in excess of major flood level for at least this week and into next week.

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Updated at 00.39 GMT

Key events

Labor set to take back Greens’ only seat in NT parliament amid low turnout at byelection

Labor appears set to take a Northern Territory city seat back from the Greens following a low turnout byelection triggered by an MP’s resignation, AAP reports.

Voters in the Darwin electorate of Nightcliff went to the polls yesterday in a byelection called after Greens MP Kat McNamara resigned, citing health reasons.

She won the Green’s first and only seat in the Northern Territory parliament by 36 votes at the 2024 poll, when the former Labor government was reduced to four members in the 25-seat legislature.

At the close of counting on Saturday night, Labor’s Ed Smelt led the Greens’ Suki Dorras-Walker by 141 votes after preferences, with Dorras-Walker needing around three-quarters of the remaining votes to win.

Voter turnout in the byelection was low, at under 67% compared with 76.6% in the 2024 election. Voting is compulsory at all levels of government in the NT but turnout at federal, state and local level is consistently among the lowest of Australian states and territories.

– AAP

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Updated at 01.19 GMT



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