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World|life|May 25, 2020 / 12:26 PM
Western Australia battered by 'once-in-a-decade' storm

AKIPRESS.COM - Western Australia has been hit by the biggest storm in a decade, leaving around 50,000 homes and businesses without power as it brought wind gusts of more than 60 miles per hour, Sky News reports. 

Conditions were expected to worsen overnight as the severe storm progressed, officials said.

Jon Broomhall, acting assistant commissioner of Western Australia's department of fire and emergency services, described the storm as a "a once-in-a-decade-type system".

He added: "Normally our storms come from the south-west, and this will come from the north-west, so it will test people's buildings, sheds and all those unsecured items, so we're asking people to secure property and make sure everything loose is tied down."

A Bureau of Meteorology official, James Ashley, said the weather formation was "dynamic and complex", adding the storm is a result of a system from Cyclone Mangga in the southern Indian Ocean interacting with a cold front.

The bureau warned people to prepare for "an unusually widespread severe weather event along the west coast", adding that "heavy rain and very gusty winds likely with dangerous surf and storm tides".

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