China Daily (Hong Kong)

Storm Eleanor brings chaos to Europe

-

PARIS — Winter storm Eleanor swept across Europe on Wednesday, bringing death, damage and disruption, snarling transport networks and cutting power to tens of thousands of people.

Two people died on Spain’s northern Basque coast after being swept away by a huge wave, officials said, and another person had to be rescued after attempting to save them.

In France, a 21-year-old skier was killed by a falling tree at Morillon in the Alps, where dangerous conditions forced the closure of several resorts.

More than a dozen others were injured by the storm across France, four seriously, civil defense spokesman Michael Bernier said as the country was lashed by what meteorolog­ists termed the strongest winds in eight years.

About 225,000 homes across France were without electricit­y, while “particular­ly intense” flooding was expected on the Atlantic coasts.

Heavy winds forced authoritie­s to close the airports in Strasbourg and Basel-Mulhouse on France’s border with Germany and Switzerlan­d before they were reopened shortly after midday.

Belgium and parts of Spain were also put on orange alert, the third of four warning levels, with officials urging people to exercise caution when venturing out.

Eleanor barreled into continenta­l Europe after whipping across England and Ireland, with the Thames Barrier, one of the largest movable flood barriers in the world, closed as a precaution­ary measure to protect London from swelling tides.

“We have seen some heavy showers push through across the south of the UK along with hail, loud thunder and lightning,” said meteorolog­ist Becky Mitchell.

In the Republic of Ireland, power supply company ESB said electricit­y had been restored to 123,000 customers, while 27,000 remained snowfall in nearly 30 years.

Forecaster­s warned that the same system could soon strengthen into a “bomb cyclone” as it rolls up the East Coast, bringing hurricane-force winds, coastal flooding and up to 30 centimeter­s of snow.

At least 17 deaths were blamed on dangerousl­y cold temperatur­es that for days have gripped wide swathes of the US from Texas to New England.

Schools in the southeast called off classes just months after being shut down because of hurricane threats, and police urged drivers to stay off the roads in a region little accustomed to the kind of winter woes common to the northeast.

“This is the coldest I’ve been in probably 50 years,” said Gorans, who lives in Fresno, California, and was visiting his wife’s family in Maryland. “I mean, this is freezing cold. My feet hurt, my ears hurt.”

 ?? MAL LANGSDON / REUTERS FRANCE ?? A family is caught in blowing sea foam on the Brittany coast after Storm Eleanor hit Saint-Guenole, France, on Wednesday.
MAL LANGSDON / REUTERS FRANCE A family is caught in blowing sea foam on the Brittany coast after Storm Eleanor hit Saint-Guenole, France, on Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China