02.22 pm, Friday May 25 2012

Europe blanketed in heavy snowfalls

05:46 AEDT Tue Feb 3 2009
VIEWS: 0
| FLOCKS: 0
| comments0 comments so far
Heavy snow in London
Europe has been crippled by heavy snow, with flights grounded and public transport disrupted.

Also on
Pants downBear attacks man on toilet BreakthroughArrest in missing boy case Wedding hitGroom 'punches above his weight' Hugging dadPhotos released in custody battle confessionKelly cites Scientology bunny timeKate Upton hits the bikini beach

A blanket of snow covered large parts of western Europe on Monday after some of the heaviest falls in two decades, causing major flight cancellations, disrupting public transport and creating misery on the roads.

London was covered in up to 10 centimetres of snow, the highest recorded in 18 years, closing the world's busiest airport at Heathrow, paralysing trains and bus services and forcing many commuters to stay at home.

Flurries also brought chaos to parts of Paris and Spain, while three people died in Italy amid adverse weather conditions as the snow reached northern Morocco.

The snow caused a Cyprus Airways plane to come off the taxiway at Heathrow before the airport was then shut down.

"The plane had safely landed and was making its way to the stand and the front wheel went on to the grass area," a spokeswoman for airport operator BAA said. Passengers were bussed to the terminal and there were no injuries.

Both runways have since been closed at the world's biggest international airport while all flights have been cancelled up to 5pm local time.

Forecasters the Met Office issued a severe weather warning for London and the southeast of England, while train and London Underground services have also been badly hit.

An army of snow ploughs and gritters were working to clear roads as a spokesman for the Highways Agency said: "If your journey is not essential I would strongly advise you don't make it."

Hundreds of schools in southeast England have also been shut.

"It's absolute madness going in to work, but at least I can say I tried," said Bree McWilliam, a policy analyst from Brisbane, Australia, who experienced her first ever snowfall as she struggled into work.

"I've never seen snow before, it's very exciting. It doesn't snow in Queensland," the 28-year-old told AFP.

In France, flights were delayed by an average of an hour in Paris's Orly and Roissy-Charles de Gaulle airports. One of Orly's two runways was closed, and the other opened two hours late.

Air France cancelled around 30 short and medium haul flights from Charles de Gaulle, but said long haul routes had not been troubled.

France's road traffic agency urged motorists to cancel non-essential journeys, with roads difficult and in a small number of some cases impassable around Paris and in the east near Strasbourg.

The snow and icy conditions caused a dozen accidents in the Paris region without causing injuries, officials said.

In Italy, three people died and 500 people had to be evacuated from their homes on Sunday amid bad weather in parts of the country, while Milan woke Monday to a dusting of snow.

Up to 20cm fell in parts of Switzerland overnight while part of the road around the San Bernardino tunnel was closed.

One to three centimetres of snow fell in Belgium, where around 400km of traffic jams accumulated during the morning peak hour.

"The rain and snow that have been forecast are going to turn our roads into ice rinks," Belgium's touring automobile association said.

Snowfalls snarled traffic in several parts of Spain including the Madrid area where sections of two highways were temporarily closed to vehicles, causing traffic jams, the National Travel Administration Department (DGT) reported.

A storm disrupted ferry travel from the port city of Algeciras to Morocco, authorities said, and parts of central and southwestern Spain reported traffic disruptions before returning to normal in most areas by mid-afternoon.

Both Spain and France were hit by violent storms late last month that killed 25 people and left hundreds of thousands of homes without power.

 

Most popular

 Corby worse than a terrorist: judgeThe chief justice of Indonesia's Constitutional Court has criticised the Schapelle Corby clemency decision, saying drug crimes are worse than terrorism.
 Alleged child prostitute 'feared mistress'A 12-year-old girl allegedly involved in a Sydney child prostitution ring worried about getting into trouble if she didn't provide sex, a court has heard.
 Heavy rain to hit MelbourneMelbourne is set to receive almost one month's worth of rainfall on Friday with up to 50mm of rain forecast to hit part of the city by the afternoon.
 Man says he suffocated missing NY boy

A man has told New York police he suffocated a long-missing six-year-old boy, in a possible break in a crime that helped launch a missing children's movement across the United States.

 Clinton snapped at party with porn stars

Former US president Bill Clinton has been photographed with his arms around two porn stars at a function in Monaco.

 Dying man finds support on World of WarcraftIn the game of World of Warcraft, Patrice Anseline is a level 85 Blood Elf Death Knight called Sackmagraph, of the Dath'Remar Horde’s Hydra guild.
 Groom's wedding song has audience in stitches

He admits to punching above his weight and drooling in bed but a UK groom has become an internet hit with a self-depreciating wedding song he penned for his bride.

 Queensland girls can stay until AugustThe High Court has ruled that four Queensland girls facing deportation to Italy in a custody battle will be allowed to stay in Australia until a full bench hearing in August.
 Another big rattle for ChristchurchA 5.2 earthquake has struck Christchurch but early reports suggest it has not caused any major damage or injury.
 Father in custody fight pictured with daughters

The Italian father at the centre of a bitter battle for custody of his four daughters has released photos of himself with the girls in a bid to clear his name.

Be our fan on Facebook
Most Recommended
You need the latest version of Flash Player.
Enjoy the most vivid content on the web
Watch video without extra features
Interact with applications on your favourite sites
Upgrade now

page complete