Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Blizzard hits Spain, leaves four dead

Unusual snowfall traps over 1,500 in vehicles

- By Aritz Parra

MADRID — A blizzard blanketed large parts of Spain with an unusual amount of snow on Saturday, killing at least four people and leaving thousands trapped in cars or at train stations and airports that suspended services.

The national weather agency reported that the snowfall in Madrid had reached a level unseen in a half-century. More than 20 inches of snow fell in the Spanish capital, according to the weather agency AEMET.

The bodies of a man and woman were recovered by the Andalucía region emergency service after their car was washed away by a flooded river near the town of Fuengirola. The Interior Ministry said a 54-yearold man was found dead in Madrid under a big pile of snow. A homeless man died of hypothermi­a in the northern city of Zaragoza, the local police department reported.

More than half of Spain’s provinces remained under severe weather alerts for Storm Filomena on Saturday evening, seven of them at the highest level of warning. In Madrid, authoritie­s activated a red alert for the first time since the system was adopted four decades ago and called in the military to rescue people from vehicles trapped on everything from small roads to the city’s major thoroughfa­res.

Sandra Morena, who became trapped late Friday as she commuted to her night shift as a security guard in a shopping center, arrived home, on foot, after an army emergency unit helped her out Saturday morning.

“It usually takes me 15 minutes, but this time it has been 12 hours freezing, without food or water, crying with other people because we didn’t know how we were going to get out of there,” said Morena, 22.

“Snow can be very beautiful, but spending the night trapped in a car because of it is no fun,” she added.

As of Saturday evening, Spanish security services had rescued all of the people who were trapped in vehicles, more than 1,500, Interior Minister Fernando Grande-Marlaska said.

AEMET had warned that some regions would be receiving more than 24 hours of continuous snowfall because of the odd combinatio­n of a cold air mass stagnant over the Iberian Peninsula and the arrival of the warmer Storm Filomena from the south.

The storm is expected to be followed by a severe drop in temperatur­es in the coming days, the agency said.

Transport Minster José Luis Ábalos warned that “snow is going to turn into ice and we will enter a situation perhaps more dangerous than what we have at the moment.”

He added that the priority was to aid those in need but also to ensure the supply chain for food and other basic goods.

The Spanish government plans to take extra steps to ensure that the country’s weekly shipment of the BioNTech-Pfizer coronaviru­s vaccine on Monday can be distribute­d to regional health authoritie­s via police-escorted convoys, officials said.

 ?? Bernat Armangue The Associated Press ?? Neighbors have drinks in the street during a snowfall Saturday in Bustarviej­o, on the outskirts of Madrid.
Bernat Armangue The Associated Press Neighbors have drinks in the street during a snowfall Saturday in Bustarviej­o, on the outskirts of Madrid.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States