European freeze:
Cold snap halts traffic on the Danube and other key rivers and kills more than 60 across the continent.
BUCHAREST, Romania — Officials suspended shipping along Europe’s second-longest waterway on Tuesday as a polar spell gripped a large swathe of the continent, causing hardship especially among migrants, the homeless and the elderly. The deep freeze has caused at least 61 deaths since it began last week, a third of those in Poland.
Romanian police halted shipping at midday for an undetermined period along a 565-mile stretch of the Danube River, which crosses Romania. Croatian and Serbian authorities also stopped river traffic on the Danube.
In Serbia, shipping was banned on the River Sava because of icy conditions, which claimed another two lives in southern Serbia. Authorities said an 88-year-old man and his son, 64, died from freezing temperatures in the village of Duga Poljana, in the south, which has been hardest-hit by the recent cold spell. Serbian state TV reported the two victims, discovered by a man delivering bread from a neighboring village, were extremely poor.
Three people have been found dead in the past three days in Macedonia as temperatures plunged to -4 Fahrenheit. One 68-year old homeless man was found frozen to death in the capital, Skopje, while a 60-year-old man died in front of his home in the southern town in Strumica. An 80-yearold woman was discovered in her home in eastern Macedonia. Authorities urged homeless people to go to shelters and local schools, which are taking them in during the cold spell.
In Albania, it snowed in the southern city of Saranda for the first time in 32 years. A homeless Albanian man was found dead in the southeastern city of Korca, the fifth person to die in the frigid weather.
In the central town of Bulqize, temperatures plummeted to -7.6 F, with most rural areas cut off by snow. There were temporary power and water outages. Army helicopters were distributing aid in remote mountain areas.
After strong criticism from aid agencies and others, authorities on the Greek island of Lesbos said they would move 250 refugees from tents at camps into vacant hotel rooms as the heavy snow continued unabated around the country.
“We denounce the inhuman living conditions refugees on Lesbos are facing,” the island’s public hospital doctors association said “They are living in mud and snow, cramped together in unsuitable tents ... and lighting fires inside them to stay warm.”
Elsewhere, a state of emergency was declared in several parts of Greece.
Snow dusted the ancient Acropolis in Athens and closed most schools in the capital, while more than 10 heated shelters were opened for the homeless.