Evacuees from Mallacoota arrive in Melbourne, including 19-year-old Greek woman

·

HMAS Choules, with almost 1000 people and 115 pets on board, docked at Hastings at 4.30pm, with the first bus load of people arriving at the Somerville relief centre about 5.30pm.

Friends and family embraced, as reality kicked in that the five-day ordeal had ended for most of them. About 800 people arrived at the centre, while 200 evacuees went straight to Melbourne.

The mood was buoyant but calm, and one woman carried a sign “inaction costs more”.

Nineteen-year-old Jackie Stefanopoulous, who was on board HMAS Choules, had been holidaying in Mallacoota with her boyfriend and his family, when “all of a sudden we heard about the incoming bushfires”.

“I was petrified, a lot of people were petrified,” Ms Stefanopoulous said.

“The sense of uncertainty [was frightening], like not knowing whether we will be OK, understanding that there were bushfires surrounding us only a couple of metres. I feared for my life, it was really scary.”

The Mt Waverley woman said she was running out of food and clean water, and that she had only slept for about 10 hours in total over four days.

She praised HMAS Choules crew, who she said had been “awesome”.

Sourced via The Age.

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Latest News

Greek Australian developers cement their influence in Adelaide’s property boom

Adelaide is in the midst of an unprecedented development surge, fuelled by billions of dollars in public and private investment.

Mediterranean diet conference considers future of humanity

A Mediterranean diet conference drew globally acclaimed researchers to Kalamata, Greece October 13-14.

Chanel Contos calls for opt-in algorithms to protect young people online

Contos says this shift would “keep the momentum going” following the world-first policy that comes into force on December 10.

Greece identifies its first wolf-dog hybrid

Greece has confirmed its first-ever wolf–dog hybrid, marking a surprising development as wolves continue to expand across Europe.

Sevanah and Georgia Pantelis call out ‘inequitable’ cost of vital diabetes devices

Years after her younger sister Georgia was diagnosed with type-one diabetes, Sevanah Pantelis began experiencing similar symptoms.

You May Also Like

Charges laid after Melbourne man Efstratios found dead in veggie patch

A 40-year-old man has been charged with murder after the body of missing man Efstratios, 53, was discovered buried in a vegetable patch.

Metro Trains executive Peter Bollas admits accepting corrupt payments

A public transport executive has been caught on a phone tap telling a cleaning company he would "cover up" for them, after it emerged they had failed to spray down a Melbourne train at the start of the state's first coronavirus surge.

Healthcare workers in Greece protest mandatory vaccines as COVID cases remain above 6,000

Hundreds of Greek healthcare workers protested in central Athens against mandatory coronavirus vaccines for their profession on Wednesday.