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Vital signs
‘Unsung heroes’ work behind devastating scenes

By Michael Brooke
Volume 48, No. 5, April 6, 2006

LACW Lindsay Leonard of No. 1 Combat Logistics Squadron helps to retrieve medical equipment from a badly damaged storehouse at Innisfail hospital.
LACW Lindsay Leonard of No. 1 Combat Logistics Squadron helps to retrieve medical equipment from a badly damaged storehouse at Innisfail hospital.

Photo by SGT John Carroll

AIR FORCE personnel from No. 86WG are among the many ‘unsung heroes’ of the whole-of-government response to the devastation caused by Cyclone Larry in Far North Queensland which former CDF GEN Peter Cosgrove (Rtd) likened to “some terrible bombing raid”.

Larry lashed the heavily populated coastal strip on March 20, but Air Force air assets and ADF personnel were quickly on the scene with food and medical supplies, as well as equipment to restore vital infrastructure including power and communications.

DHC-4 Caribous and C-130 Hercules from No. 86WG based at RAAF Bases Amberley, Townsville and Richmond, along with other ADF aviation assets, gave the distraught victims of Larry hope by flying in tonnes of urgently needed supplies and equipment.

Members of Combat Support Group and Surveillance and Response Group assisted with the restoration of airfield services, air traffic services and the off-loading of aircraft at the Innisfail airport.

Three C-130s from No. 36SQN and No. 37SQN flew from Richmond, Townsville and Innisfail to deliver supplies including tarpaulins for scores of roofless houses. In all, over 500,000 pounds of cargo, including 200,000 pounds of water and 100,000 pounds of tarpaulins, were ferried on more than 50 sorties by C-130 and DHC-4 aircraft.

Some of the supplies were delivered direct to Innisfail by C130 while others were ferried by No. 38SQN Detachment DHC-4 Caribou aircraft from Townsville to Innisfail.

They were then distributed to thousands of victims, many of whom lost their homes when winds in excess of 295km/h ripped through the area.

GPCAPT McGarry told AIR FORCE News that No. 86WG’s role in OP Larry Assist again demonstrates the ability of Air Lift Group to respond to urgent requirements of the Government and ADF, whether the mission be disaster relief or peace operations.

ADF pilots said that from the air Larry’s trail of destruction resembled a 50km-wide raw scar between Innisfail and Cairns.

The air offered the best perspective of Larry’s path of destruction, with F-111 reconnaissance aircraft used to fly photographic missions to assess the areas in most need of disaster relief assistance.

Such was the devastation that GEN Peter Cosgrove (Rtd), who was appointed to lead the recovery taskforce, likened cyclone-ravaged north Queensland to the war zones he has seen.

 

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