Snowiest
winter in 100 years paralyzes Moscow traffic for 3,500 km
RT,
5
February, 2013
The
snowiest winter in a century has hit the Russian capital, causing
Muscovites to get stuck in traffic jams 3,500km in length on Monday
evening – the distance from Moscow to Madrid.
Since
the beginning of the winter, over 2 meters of snow has fallen on the
Russian capital, the Moscow mayor’s aide in housing and public
utilities Pyotr Biryukov told Interfax. Snowfall is expected in
Moscow for four or five more days, he added.
On
Monday, 45,000 community services employees and 15,000 units of
equipment were attempting to cope with 26 cm of snow – nearly a
fifth of the average annual fall.
The
latest snowfall has become a nightmare for drivers with the capital’s
commuters trapped in gridlock.
Many
of those who left their workplace in the evening had to spend five to
10 hours getting home. The average speed of vehicles was no more than
7-9 km/h. The number of road accidents – 3,000 – was much higher
than during an ordinary day, with minor accidents quadrupling,
according to Channel One TV.
Pedestrians
were having a hard time, too, trying to make their way through ice
and huge snowdrifts on the sidewalks. Over 50 people were injured
after falling.
On
Tuesday morning, the streets became virtual ‘skating rinks’, with
passengers of minibuses forced to push the vehicles up the hill from
time to time, and then jumping into the moving vehicles.
Overnight,
almost 150 huge trucks became stuck on the Moscow ring highway,
blocking it for hours.
Moscow’s
Yandex Traffic Jams application showed that traffic was at level 10,
the highest possible.
Meanwhile,
over a hundred flights were grounded at Moscow airports. Notably,
Russian PM Dmitry Medvedev’s plane was unable to land in Vnukovo
airport, and proceeded to St. Petersburg.
It’s
not the first time that Moscow has seen massive snowfalls this winter
– in mid-January the situation was similar in terms of heavy
falls – and traffic. Yandex Traffic Jams also recorded level
10 at that time.
In
December, the harshest temperatures in 70 years were recorded, with
thermometers showing temperatures as low as -50 degrees Celsius in
some regions of Russia.
Meteorologists
predict more snow is in store for Muscovites in February and March.
“March
is considered a winter month here,”
one top Hydro Meteorological Center official indicated to Interfax.
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