Thousands left without power after wild weather in New Zealand


June 27 (Reuters) - Thousands ⁠of people in New Zealand ⁠were without power on Saturday, a ‌day after a low-pressure system swept across the country triggering flooding and landslides.

More than 3,000 ​outages were recorded on Saturday ⁠after the storms ⁠lashed central regions of the country of ⁠5.3 ‌million people, including the capital Wellington, the utility Powerco said.

"After ⁠a very wet and windy 24 ​hours, the ‌weather is on its way out," ⁠national ​weather forecaster MetService posted on X.

Emergency authorities warned of debris on roads, areas ⁠of surface flooding and a ​continued risk of landslides in Wellington.

The wild weather forced the cancellation on Friday of ⁠200 flights in and out of Wellington. Officials in Lower Hutt, northeast of Wellington, reported flooded roads and two ​landslides.

In January, heavy ⁠rain triggered a landslide that killed six ​people at a busy ‌campground on the country's ​North Island.

(Reporting by Sam McKeith in Sydney; Editing by William Mallard)

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