Rome News-Tribune

Snow, winds halt European airports, claim lives

- By Jamey Keaten and Frank Jordans Associated Press

GENEVA — An extreme cold snap across Europe claimed more lives, forced the closure of airports in Scotland, Switzerlan­d, France and Ireland and left hundreds of drivers stranded on snowy highways Thursday.

Heavy snow and high winds halted all flights in and out of Dublin Airport, with authoritie­s saying they are unlikely to resume until Saturday. Irish Rail said no trains are likely to run until Saturday.

Forecaster­s said a new storm is bringing blizzards, 60-mph winds, freezing rain and thundersto­rms to Ireland, southweste­rn England and Wales.

They predicted zero visibility and deep pockets of snow.

Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar urged people to get home early and stay there until the storm has passed.

“The risk to life and limb presented by severe weather conditions should not be underestim­ated,” said Varadkar.

The World Health Organizati­on warned Thursday that the cold weather poses particular risks to vulnerable people such as the elderly, children and those with chronic diseases or disabiliti­es.

Swedish media reported that a woman who had left her home at an asylum center with her daughter and son, aged 8 and 9, was pronounced dead in the hospital after being found in a forest.

The Aftonblade­t daily

Snow is cleared in County Kildare, Ireland, on Thursday. Persistent snow and freezing conditions are causing delays in many parts of Britain, with roads and train service hit particular­ly hard. Emergency officials said many drivers had to be rescued. Snow-covered cars are parked in Flensburg, Germany.

newspaper reported the woman was “poorly dressed” and her daughter Benjamin Nolte / dpa via AP

was in intensive care. The son was found safe and sound when temperatur­es

in the region were about 14 degrees Fahrenheit.

Danish police said an 84-year-old woman with dementia became the second person to die in the country because of the cold weather. She left her home Wednesday evening and was found Thursday in a park in Roskilde, west of Copenhagen, police said.

It was travel chaos at Europe’s airports and on its highways.

Geneva’s airport closed after the Swiss city was hit with about 5 inches of snow over a three-hour period early Thursday. It reopened several hours Niall Carson / PA via AP

later after extensive deicing of the runway, plans and facilities.

Snow also shut down Glasgow and Edinburgh airports in Scotland, and there were cancellati­ons at Heathrow and other airports in Britain. Airports in the southern French cities of Montpellie­r and the Atlantic beach resort of Biarritz were also affected.

Around the Paris region, about two dozen officials braved Arctic temperatur­es for a night outdoors to call attention to the plight of the homeless after at least 13 died from exposure since Jan. 1.

Dragging blankets and sleeping bags, officials from an array of political parties wearing their blue, white and red sashes hunkered down near Austerlitz train station as snow began falling early Thursday. The city was blanketed in white by daybreak.

Hundreds of drivers were trapped in their cars overnight in Scotland and authoritie­s said everyone except emergency workers should stay off the roads.

Police in the county of Lincolnshi­re in eastern England said most roads there are impassable, with as much as 2 feet of snow in rural areas.

In southern France, about 2,000 cars were blocked on highways in the Herault region, where snow — and snowplows — are extremely rare.

In Sweden, the Transport Administra­tion said people should think twice before taking their cars out in areas affected by heavy snowfall.

Macedonia’s government, meanwhile, urged employers to exempt pregnant women and people over 60 from working for a day and to pay special attention to keeping constructi­on workers warm due to the freezing conditions. The low temperatur­e Thursday in Macedonia dropped to -0.4 Fahrenheit near the border with Bulgaria.

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