Germany
has had its mildest winter yet (with no sun), followed now by a huge
dump of snow. All a big coincidence ofcourse!
Snow
causes chaos in Europe
Frankfurt's
airport closed, trains stopped running under the English Channel, and
the French army was ordered to help clear roads - all because of a
sudden dump of oddly late snowfall on Western Europe..
13
March, 2013
Less
prepared for the kind of heavy snow that regularly hits northern and
eastern neighbours, France, Germany, Britain and Belgium have
struggled to keep moving amid the frosty, blustery conditions.
Instead
of enjoying the onset of spring, travellers shivered in stranded
cars, packed onto icy train platforms, or languished in airport
waiting halls. T
housands
of schoolchildren stayed home. Tens of thousands of homes were
without electricity.
Frankfurt
airport, Europe's third busiest, closed at midday Tuesday (midnight
NZT) after recording about 12 centimetres of snow. More than 355
flights had been cancelled by mid-afternoon.
The
airport reopened one of its four runways only for takeoffs after a
brief respite in the snowfall - but the snow then resumed. And it was
unclear how much longer the other three runways would remain closed.
North
of Frankfurt, the A45 autobahn was shut down after more than 100 cars
and trucks crashed in a pileup near Muenzenberg. Police said dozens
of people were injured but that no deaths were reported.
At
Paris' Orly Airport, a Tunisair jet skidded off the runway because of
icy conditions, according to the airport authority.
No
one was injured, but the incident caused even further delays at an
airport that has suffered cancellations and problems all day.
Air
France - the country's largest passenger airline - warned via Twitter
that anyone planning to travel to Europe or France via Paris should
delay their trip.
Airport
screens flashed with red warnings after the French civil aviation
authority ordered about 300 flights - a quarter of the day's total -
cancelled out of Paris' Charles de Gaulle Airport.
Other
airports in northern France were closed, and Brussels' airport was
operating on a single runway.
Service
on the Eurostar trains that go under the English Channel was
suspended mid-morning because severe weather in northern France and
Belgium forced operators to close sections of the railway, said
Eurostar spokeswoman Lucy Drake.
As
the snow continued to fall in the afternoon, service was suspended
for the rest of the day, Eurostar later confirmed on its website.
Other high-speed train services around the region were also halted.
The
French army was called in to help as civilian authorities struggled
to clear roads and rescue people stuck in cars and buses on snowed-in
roads, notably in Normandy, Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault said on
RTL radio.
With
up to 50 centimetres of snow in some areas of northern France, the
government urged people to stay home unless absolutely necessary.
The
French housing ministry, meanwhile, said it will prolong until the
end of March the winter-long ban on tenant evictions - owing to the
biting weather conditions.
Office
buildings in the French capital - like those in Brussels, the
European Union's capital - were only partly full.
The
French train network SNCF urged commuters in the Paris region to stay
home instead of trying to reach downtown "because of the
unfavourable evolution of weather conditions."
In
southeastern England, snow and ice stranded hundreds of motorists as
temperatures plunged as low as minus 3 degrees Celsius, and many
motorists abandoned their cars. Traffic backed up for 50 kilometres
in some areas, with reports of people being stranded for 10 hours or
more.
Among
those stuck was a group of 120 German students who had to stay
overnight in the town hall at Hastings on the south coast of England
when families set to pick them up could not reach them.
Police
in Sussex reported responding to more than 300 auto collisions in 24
hours because of slippery roads but no serious injuries were
reported.
Belgium
had a record 1,600 kilometres of traffic jams during morning rush
hour as snowdrifts turned roads slippery and reduced vision.
A
strong wind made conditions even tougher. Thousands of commuters were
left stranded on snowed-in platforms after many trains around the
region were cancelled.
Snow
affected even the workings of government and the royal palace: The
start of budgetary negotiations within Belgium's governing coalition
was delayed, and Prince Lorenz was unable to travel to Maastricht,
the Netherlands, to visit a historical exhibition.
The
US Embassy in Brussels closed for the day ''due to the continued
weather conditions."
Under
the Eiffel Tower, two Canadian tourists were among those braving the
soggy chill.
"It's
cold. Really cold," Heidi Nelson of Toronto said.
A
fellow visitor from Toronto, Laura Martin, added: "Yes, kind of
like Canada."
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