Europe hopes for weekend respite as deep freeze persists

Europe hopes for weekend respite as deep freeze persists

Fifty-nine people across 13 European countries have died because of the cold snap.

Heavy snow and blizzard conditions persisted in much of Europe, where the cold snap has caused some 60 deaths. (AFP pic)
Heavy snow and blizzard conditions persisted in much of Europe, where the cold snap has caused some 60 deaths. (AFP pic)
GENEVA:
Europe’s deep freeze, which has claimed 59 lives over the past week, showed little sign of ending Friday as a shivering continent awaited a sliver of weekend respite from the chaos wrought by a brutal Siberian weather system.

After heavy snowfall and deadly blizzards lashed Europe throughout Thursday, conditions marginally improved in some regions, but temperatures generally remained sub-zero, forcing more major delays on roads, railways and at airports.

Geneva Airport announced it had re-opened shortly after midday “despite the unfavourable meteorological conditions”, having warned earlier it faced staying shut for a second consecutive day as snowstorms continued to lash the Swiss city.

Airport authorities warned, however, of further “delays and cancellations”.

Switzerland has seen the mercury plummet to records of up to -40°C (-40°F) in the ongoing blizzard, which has also impacted air, road, and train transport around Europe and even covered Mediterranean beaches with a blanket of snow.

In France, 21 departments, mainly in the northwest, remained on alert for snow and black ice as the vicious cold snap, which British media have dubbed “the Beast from the East”, the Dutch the “Siberian Bear”, and Swedes the “Snow Cannon”, maintained its grip.

Over the past week, the freezing conditions have claimed 59 lives  – 23 in Poland, seven in Slovakia, six in the Czech Republic, five in Lithuania, four in France, three in Spain, two in Italy, Romania, Serbia, and Slovenia, and one in the UK, the Netherlands, and Sweden.

The cold threw a spanner into the works of British Prime Minister Theresa May’s plans to give a speech on Brexit in the northeastern city of Newcastle.

May elected to stay in London given the transport mayhem, which saw motorists stuck in their cars around Manchester in the northwest and troops deployed overnight in Hampshire in the deep south to aid other drivers battling fresh snowfalls and icy gales.

Also having to change their plans were Andrew Waring and his wife, Daniella, who gave birth to baby daughter Sienna on the side of a snowbound main road outside the northeastern town of Darlington.

Mr Waring delivered the child on the roadside after they realised they would not reach the hospital in time, paramedics dubbing Sienna the #A66snowbaby after the road where she emerged into the world.

An ambulance then took the family to the hospital.

“Having been present at the birth of our two other children I just copied what I had seen then,” Andrew Waring told the BBC.

In Ireland, Housing Minister Eoghan Murphy tweeted that “blizzard conditions have now passed”, advising people they could now venture outdoors while still exercising “extreme caution”.

Even so, Dublin airport remained closed until at least Saturday in Ireland, where some 24,000 people remained without electricity Friday morning.

The country battled to get over the worst of a combination of the cold blast and Storm Emma, which has also been battering Western Europe and the United Kingdom.

Temperatures in London and Dublin remained just below freezing around midday, with Britain’s Meteorological Office forecasting more snow on the way.

Italy was also still stuck in sub-zero temperatures as conditions left a number of major roads blocked owing to snow and black ice as forecasters warned northern and central regions would see little immediate improvement.

Many schools remained closed and local authorities told people to remain indoors unless they urgently needed to travel.

Elsewhere in Europe, Serbia and Croatia warmed slightly, but two people died overnight in Poland as temperatures plunged to a low of -27°C (-17°F). They were set to remain in some areas as low as -17°C (1°F) across the day even as forecasters spoke of a relative weekend thaw.

Folldal, a small village in central Norway, saw a record European low for recent days of -42°C (-44°F) during the night.

Even so, residents used to harsh conditions were sanguine.

“Life is generally ongoing,” mayor Hilde Frankmo Tveren quipped to broadcaster TV2.

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