Prince William visits Australia
TOOWOOMBA, Australia (AP) — Prince William met with the family of a 13-year-old Australian boy who gave his life to save his younger brother during devastating floods earlier this year.
The second in line to the British throne closed out a visit to disaster zones in Australia and New Zealand with brief but poignant stops in small towns where flash flooding ripped houses from their foundations and carried away cars during the worst of a weekslong crisis.
Jordan Rice and his mother were among 35 people killed in the floods in the town of Toowoomba on Jan. 10. Trapped in the car as the water rose around the family, Jordan told rescuers who reached them to grab his brother, Blake, 11, first.
William chatted with Blake and his father, John Tyson, on Sunday at one of several functions where the prince mingled with survivors of the flooding that swamped a huge part of northeastern Queensland state starting late last year.
"He could feel our pain, you could see it in his eyes," Tyson said after meeting with the prince.
William's visit, which comes as anticipation builds around his wedding in late April to Kate Middleton, has been relatively low key out of respect for those affected by the disasters in the places he has toured, starting last week in the earthquake-struck city of Christchurch in New Zealand.
The focus has been on the prince meeting survivors in informal gatherings and getting briefings from officials on recovery efforts, rather than speeches or large ceremonial appearances. William hasn't talked directly to the media during the visits.
Flown by military helicopter, William stopped in the town of Grantham, which was almost completely wiped away by flash flooding in January. He also visited Ipswich, a larger town that was one of many inundated by floodwaters.




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