Friday, January 14, 2011

Australian flood teen's sacrifice to save brother


By Bryony Jones, CNN
January 13, 2011
Jordan Rice (inset) was swept to his death when floodwaters surrounded his family's car in Toowoomba.
Jordan Rice (inset) was swept to his death when floodwaters surrounded his family's car in Toowoomba.
 
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Family trapped on roof of car as floodwaters rose in Toowoomba
  • Teenager pleads with rescuers to save his younger brother first
  • Mother and son swept to their deaths in the torrent
 A teenager who was scared of water drowned in the Queensland floods after begging rescuers to save his younger brother first.
Jordan Rice, 13, and his mother Donna, 43, were swept away as a wall of water hit the town of Toowoomba on Monday afternoon.
His family has hailed the youngster's selfless actions.

"Jordan can't swim and is terrified of water," his father, John Tyson, told local newspaper The Toowoomba Chronicle. "But when the man went to rescue him, he said 'save my brother first.'
"I can only imagine what was going on inside to give up his life to save his brother, even though he was petrified of water. He is our little hero."
 
Families struggle to survive flooding
 
Australia's international flood victims
 
Tearful flood victims return home
 
Resolute Queenslanders access damage
 
Flood-hit area

Rice was taking Jordan and his 10-year-old brother Blake to buy school uniforms when the family car became stuck in floodwaters.
As the tide rose around them, the mother-of-four made a desperate call to the emergency services, and the trio clambered on to the roof of their stranded vehicle, before passer-by Warren McErlean stopped to help.
"I called out for some ropes and a guy gave me some ropes and I tied those together and just headed out towards this car," he told the Nine Network.
"But the water just kept coming up and by the time I got near this car it just swept me off my feet.
"The mum put the boy on his back and brought him across to me and by that time I grabbed the boy and the water kept coming up... it was too much water and there was just no time. The tension took up on the rope and I had to let it go.
"He was just pleading with me to please save my mum, please save my mummy - he was screaming to save his mum.
"It's terrible. I just kept telling the boy it was going to be alright and it wasn't," a distraught McErlean explained.
"I'm just very sorry for himself and his family that we couldn't do some more and get them out."
A Facebook page set up as a tribute to Jordan has garnered more than 150,000 supporters, and has been filled with messages of sympathy and support for his father and brothers Blake, Kyle, 16, and Chris, 22.
The death toll from the Queensland floods has risen to 15, and there are fears it could grow further as the waters recede in the days to come, with some 70 people still listed as missing.

Dozens still missing as floodwaters peak in Brisbane
"We still have a number of families who don't know where their children are, who don't know where their loved ones are," said Queensland Premier Anna Bligh.

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