Western Mail

Death toll rises as heavy snow hits parts of Europe

- ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORTERS newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

THE DEATH toll from severe weather in Europe has risen to at least 17 as heavy snowfall continued to cause problems in Austria and southern Germany.

Austrian police said that a 16-yearold boy from Australia was killed in an avalanche in St Anton am Arlberg as he was skiing with his family on Wednesday.

In neighbouri­ng Slovakia, the mountain rescue service said a 37-year-old man was killed by an avalanche in the Mala Fatra mountains. A seven-year-old child was killed in Aying, near Munich, by a falling tree which was reportedly weighed down by snow.

That brought to at least 17 the number of weather-related deaths reported in Europe over the past week.

Several railway lines in the Alps were closed because of the snow, lorries and cars got stuck for hours on a highway in south-western Germany and schools were closed in parts of Bavaria.

Roads into several places were closed although Galtuer in western Austria, where a massive avalanche in 1999 killed 31 people, was reachable again on Thursday after being cut off.

The Austrian minister responsibl­e for tourism, Elisabeth Koestinger, said that “in most skiing areas, there is no reason for concern at present if people keep to the rules and don’t leave the secured slopes”.

Austrian public broadcaste­r ORF reported that the weather was expected to calm on Friday but further heavy snow could be expected on Sunday.

In the Czech Republic, around 9,000 households were without electricit­y on Thursday after heavy snow in regions bordering Germany and Austria.

On Norway’s Arctic Svalbard islands, more than 100 people were evacuated as a precaution because of a storm and the risk of avalanches.

The Svalbard archipelag­o is 500 miles north of Norway’s mainland.

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 ?? Klaus-Dietmar Gabbert ?? > Workers de-ice parts on a classic steam locomotive near Wernigerod­e, Germany, yesterday
Klaus-Dietmar Gabbert > Workers de-ice parts on a classic steam locomotive near Wernigerod­e, Germany, yesterday

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