Shanghai Daily

Deadly blizzards lash Europe, air travel disrupted

- (AFP)

HEAVY snowfall and deadly blizzards lashed Europe yesterday, forcing airports to cancel or delay flights around the continent, as a deep freeze gripped countries from the far north to the Mediterran­ean beaches in the south.

The snowstorms, unusual for much of Europe at this time of year, left roads blocked, thousands of drivers stranded and schools shut.

The death toll Europe-wide continued to climb to more than 50, as another three people perished in Poland, taking the number of victims there to 21, most of them rough sleepers.

There have also been six deaths in the Czech Republic in recent days, five in Lithuania, four each in France and Slovakia, three in Spain, two each in Italy, Serbia, Romania and Slovenia, and one each in Britain and the Netherland­s.

“Those most at risk of coldrelate­d illness include elderly people, children, and people who have chronic diseases or physical or mental limitation­s,” the World Health Organizati­on said in a statement, adding that the poor, the homeless and migrants were often hardest hit.

The Siberian cold front yesterday forced the Geneva airport to close for several hours in the morning, with temperatur­es plunging in Switzerlan­d to nearly minus 40 degrees Celsius at higher altitudes.

Scotland’s Glasgow airport remains closed and Edinburgh airport said several airlines have decided not to fly because “they do not have the critical mass of staff needed to run operations securely.”

Snow also forced the cancellati­on of all flight operations at the Dublin airport with services not expected to resume until Saturday at the earliest.

Several flights to Malaga in southern Spain were diverted because of strong winds.

Some people enjoyed the cold, with families taking children and pets out to play.

But many who took out their ice skates discovered the waters were not frozen enough. A 74year-old man who fell through the ice on a pond near Bruges remained in hospital in critical condition yesterday.

The mercury also dropped below freezing across southern Europe. Snowfall in northern Italy forced the cancellati­on of 50 percent of regional trains, while in the city of Naples, schools were shut.

In normally balmy southern France, beaches in Nice were blanketed in a thick layer of snow.

Near the city of Montpellie­r, around 2,000 drivers were stranded on a motorway, causing anger from those sitting behind the wheel for hours.

“The motorway looks like a cemetery of trucks and cars,” tweeted Anthony Jammot, describing an “apocalypti­c” 24 hours in his car with two young children and no informatio­n or help from local authoritie­s.

In Paris, which awoke yesterday under a blanket of snow, authoritie­s continued operating emergency shelters for the city’s roughly 3,000 homeless.

Demanding more efforts to keep people off the streets, around 30 local officials spent the night near the city’s Gare d’Austerlitz train station as temperatur­es dipped below zero.

The unusually cold weather has also impacted local customs, as the first spring month began. In Romania, people were marking the day without the amulets they traditiona­lly exchange.

In Bucharest, where it has been snowing since Monday with temperatur­es hovering around minus 10 degrees Celsius, sales of the “martisor” good luck charms have plummeted along with the temperatur­e.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China