Nelson Mail

Help us, locals ask army as snowstorms wreak havoc

-

BRITAIN: Forecaster­s warned yesterday that lives could be lost as one of the coldest snaps in recent memory led to power cuts, cancelled hospital operations and stranded vehicles across the UK.

Swathes of Scotland were placed on red alert, the Met Office’s highest warning level, indicating a risk to life, with the southwest of England also being kept under close watch.

Meteorolog­ists said all but nonessenti­al travel should be postponed or cancelled in central Scotland, and residents of Devon and Cornwall were also advised to stay home. The region was under an amber warning yesterday but is being closely monitored.

‘‘People [in Devon and Cornwall] need to be prepared for the event, even if they don’t go into the red,’’ said Alex Burkill, at the Met Office. ‘‘It’s a significan­t period of weather. People should be thinking about cancelling journeys unless necessary, even in an amber warning area.’’

Rural communitie­s could be cut off for several days, the Met Office said, amid power cuts and mobile phone network interrupti­ons.

A man in his sixties died in hospital after falling into a lake at Danson Park in Welling, southeast London, while in Essex a boy who ran on to a frozen lake was stranded when the ice started to break up. A friend phoned 999 and firefighte­rs were able to rescue him using inflatable sledges.

Military help was requested in Lincolnshi­re after heavy snowfall. The region’s Resilience Forum, a group of local public bodies, suggested that army and RAF vehicles could be used to reach people trapped by the snow. Lincolnshi­re police responded to at least 65 crashes and reports of lorries jack-knifing on the A46.

Forecaster­s expect as much as 40cm of snow to fall in some parts of the UK, with the sea freezing over near the Isle of Wight. The roadside recovery company Green Flag said there was a 72 per cent increase in incidents by midday yesterday, with 21,000 callouts.

NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde cancelled all outpatient appointmen­ts and routine procedures in hospitals for today (Thursday). British Airways and Flybe cancelled all flights to Scotland, with train services in the red alert area stopped until today (Thursday).

A 16-vehicle pile-up on the A1 at Elkesley, near Sheffield, involved five lorries and led to the road being closed in both directions.

There were nationwide complaints that local authoritie­s had failed to provide enough gritters, prompting villagers in Witham St Hughs, Lincolnshi­re, to spread grit on the roads using their cars.

– The Times

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? Members of the Household Cavalry return to their barracks as snow falls in London yesterday.
PHOTO: AP Members of the Household Cavalry return to their barracks as snow falls in London yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand