Fears grow for missing couple who were washed away by floodwaters after heavy rain as category three cyclone brings more torrential downpours to the east coast
- The pair were last seen pushing black Ford Falcon in flood waters just after 8pm
- Their car was later found abandoned and police are seeking assistance
- A category three cyclone is gathering pace as it tracks past New Caledonia
- Tropical cyclone Uesi could reach category-3 strength by Tuesday afternoon
- Joint Typhoon Warning Centre said storm could head towards NSW coast
A man and woman who were swept away by strong floodwaters are feared missing.
The pair were last seen pushing a black Ford Falcon in flood waters just after 8pm on Wednesday on the Burnett Highway near Stock Yard Creek in Queensland.
Their car was later found abandoned and police are seeking assistance of their whereabouts.

A man and woman who were swept away by strong floodwaters are feared missing (pictured: Flood water inundate a road in Dalby, Queensland)

Fallen trees following torrential rain in Sydney saw power cut thousands of residents
Queensland is set to endure more flood damage as multiple storms are set to dump a deluge on the state.
A cyclone has also been identified by meteorologists over Noumea and is tracking down the state's southeast coast. The worst of the cyclone is expected to hit on Thursday.
Shark nets and bait hooks have also been pulled from Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast beaches in anticipation of the dangerous swells expected.

Waves are pictured lapping the shore near to homes in Collaroy on Sydney's northern beaches on Monday. Sydney's heaviest downpour on 30 years over the weekend could be followed by more misery from tropical cyclone Uesi
A category three cyclone is expected to bring more torrential rain to Sydney this week just days after the city copped its heaviest downpour in 30 years.
Tens of thousands of people in the city are still without power after 400mm of rain fell on parts of the state on Sunday.
Multiple severe weather warnings issued by the Bureau of Meteorology remain in place on Tuesday morning across NSW - including the Hunter, Illawarra, and south coast regions.
Forecasters are now predicting tropical cyclone Uesi - which is forecast to turn from a category-2 to a category-3 tropical cyclone by Tuesday afternoon - could impact the Australian east coast.
'The system is several days out,' BoM forecaster Gabrielle Woodhouse told Daily Mail Australia.
'But if the system comes west we could see hazardous surf in New South Wales and Lord Howe Island.

As the ferocious weather system gathers over New Caledonia, forecasters are predicting tropical cyclone Uesi could impact the Australian coast

People watch rough ocean conditions at Bronte Beach in Sydney on Monday. Cyclone Uesi could bring more hazardous surf and strong winds to Australia's east coast
Weatherzone said the dangerous surf could be accompanied by strong winds and more heavy rain - although there are no estimates yet about how much rainfall there will be.
The system is as of Monday night being tracked by authorities in Fiji, and Ms Woodhouse said it is still unclear in which direction the cyclone will head.
'Currently all the information being put out on Uesi by Fiji is that the system will track further south - but where it goes from there is a bigger unknown,' she said.
The Joint Typhoon Warning Centre has said though the storm - even in a weakened state - are on track to head south-westerly to the NSW coast.
Map-based projections released by the organisation showed the system gathering pace north-west of New Caledonia before growing in size as it approaches the NSW/ Queensland border.
In the more advanced stages of the cyclone's development, winds could reach speeds of 55 knots - 101km/h.
For reference, wind speeds over the weekend reached 107km/h off the coast of Sydney during the record-breaking deluge.
The average Sydney rainfall for the month of February is 117mm.

Map-based projections released by the Joint Typhoon Warning Centre showed the system gathering pace north-west of New Caledonia
Nearly 100,000 Sydneysiders remained without power on Monday following Sunday's storm.
While Ausgrid said electricity has been restored to 61,000 customers, 79,000 still don't have power.
The power was restored to homes primarily in Sydney's north, the northern beaches, eastern suburbs, south and south-west, and the Central Coast and Newcastle.
But the electricity company warned some residents could be kept in the dark 'for the next few days as we recover from the storm'.