Europe’s death toll rises to 60
People walk past a damaged car in a ditch in the snowed up northern France countryside, yesterday, in Erquinghem-Lys. Photo: AFP
The death toll rose to at least 60 yesterday as the Arctic freeze held its grip on Europe.
Road and rail travel was hard hit and ducks had to be rescued from frozen lakes.
In the meantime, South-eastern Europe was spared the snow and ice – but was instead struggling with some of the worst flooding in a century.
Entire villages in Montenegro were submerged by the rising waters, with Interior Minister Ivan Brajovic describing the floods as “unprecedented.”
With a dozen more deaths in Poland, the total number of people in Europe who have died of exposure in recent days has risen to at least 40.
The Charles de Gaulle airport in Paris was again operating normally, but many areas of France faced traffic problems because of the snow.
In Poland, police reported 12 deaths overnight, raising the death toll there to 30 over the past three days. Police were carrying out street patrols in hopes of getting drunks and homeless people into shelters since they make up the bulk of those who freeze to death each year. Animal lovers in Poland were also mobilising, with some opening their cellars to stray cats and others pulling ducks from frozen lakes. Foresters have also been putting out fodder for bison, elk and other forest-dwellers.
In the Czech Republic, the death toll rose to four after a man was found frozen in Prague. In Germany, three people have now been killed, while authorities in northern England found the bodies of two elderly residents believed to have frozen to death.
Authorities in Austria reported one death earlier in the week. The weather delayed some flights at Vienna’s airport, where officials said a crew of about 80 people were working non-stop to clear runways and de-ice aircraft.
Just across the border in Slovakia, the snow caused traffic jams in the capital, Bratislava, while a hospital in the eastern city of Presov treated dozens for injuries blamed on the snow.
Meanwhile, Britain’s government chiefs held an emergency weather meeting yesterday to discuss its ability to cope – as pensioners were reported freezing to death and commuters faced continuing chaos.
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Victor Galea
Dec 5th 2010, 05:19
Once again, the blind let their ideology blind them to facts. Climate change science predicts more extremes in weather. "Extremes" means hotter hot, colder cold, dryer dry, and wetter wet. All of which is just what we are seeing. Not to mention rising sea levels, which are also occurring.
Only the ignorant could sneer about how the severe weather events in Europe somehow call this science into question, but only because they have no concern for reality. Unfortunately, because there are so many ignorant, especially here in the US where they are often elected to Congress, we will all pay the price for their successes in delaying effective efforts to reverse or even slow down the effects of climate change. By that time, no doubt, the same ignorant climate change deniers will be blaming liberals for failing to do more to stop climate change and refuse to accept that they were the ones who enabled the disaster.
Peter Ross
Dec 4th 2010, 11:29
Global warming scientists were telling us, up to a few years ago, that our children would not know what snow is. It seems that Gaia has a sense of (cold) humour, or God?