Las Vegas Review-Journal

Mighty storm mauls middle of Europe

Five people die; several countries suffer effects

- By Kirsten Grieshaber The Associated Press

BERLIN— High winds knocked down trees and caused widespread travel chaos across much of central Europe on Sunday, leaving five people dead and several injured.

Storm Herwart, whose gusts reached 112 mph, also caused electricit­y blackouts in hundreds of thousands of homes in the Czech Republic, Austria and other countries.

Two people died in Poland, including a man who drove his car into a tree that had been knocked down by the storm, fire department spokesman Pawel Fratczak said. The second man was killed when a tree fell on his car in southweste­rn Poland and his passenger was hospitaliz­ed, Polish media reported.

Two others were killed in the Czech Republic when they were hit by falling trees, local television reported.

A 63-year-old camper was swept away in a flash flood and drowned at Jadebusen on Germany’s North Sea coast, the German news agency dpa reported.

In Berlin, one man was severely injured by falling roof tiles and another was hit by scaffoldin­g blown off a home.

Two people were injured when their cars slid off the A20 highway, which was covered with 2 inches of hail, in Germany’s northeaste­rn state of Mecklenbur­g-west Pomerania.

Train connection­s in several northern German states were shut down, including links to and from Berlin, because of the danger from branches falling on the tracks.

In the northern German city of Hamburg, the Elbe River flooded a parking garage, the city’s famous fish market and several streets. Firefighte­rs had to rescue seven cows from the Elbe.

Zoos in Prague, Berlin and the eastern German city of Rostock closed because of the danger of falling trees and the Austrian capital of Vienna shut down all operations at its main train station.

 ?? Daniel Bockwoldt ?? The Associated Press The square in front of the Hamburg fish market is flooded early Sunday. High winds struck the country, causing flooding and damage in northern and eastern Germany.
Daniel Bockwoldt The Associated Press The square in front of the Hamburg fish market is flooded early Sunday. High winds struck the country, causing flooding and damage in northern and eastern Germany.

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