Europe's worst snowfall in
years kills over 20 people
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| Workers fell a snow covered tree at a local road near Altenberg. |
Workers in southern Germany and Austria are among those
trying to using a break in the weather to try and clear heavy loads of snow
from roofs and roads as Europe's worst snowfall in years has paralyzed travel
and tourism in parts of the region and the Balkans. In all, at least 21
weather-related deaths have been reported across the continent in the last 10
days.
By Stefan J. Bos
As the death toll was rising, army helicopters were blowing
snow off treetops in Austria to reduce the risk of trees falling on roads and
rails.
And helicopters also flew 66 German teenagers out of a
mountain guest house where they had been stuck for several days.
It's part of a massive operation to reduce the impact of the
once-in-a-generation snowfall that has disrupted life in several European
countries.
The snow has been cutting off mountain villages, disrupting
transport and triggering avalanches here and in other European nations killing
nearly two dozen people.
In neighboring Germany, thousands of people are responding
to a state of emergency declared in the German state of Bavaria.
Devastated areas
Moritz Wedel of Germany's Bild newspaper spoke about the
seen in the region. "We had catastrophic scenes, on the highways here
around Munich," he said.
"There are a lot of traffic jams, there are people
killed in their cars. We have one boy killed, yesterday by a tree. That was
falling onto the boy because of the heavy snow on the tree. The boy was killed
and then later found by his mother," the journalist recalled.
"There are days with snow, coming down also from the
mountains covering tourists and people who live here. And it is expected to
even get worse in the next couple of days," Wedel added.
Workers at the Hotel Saentis in eastern Switzerland have spent Friday shoveling out hip-deep snow after a 300-meter (330-yard) wide avalanche smashed through the hotel’s windows Thursday afternoon and piled up in rooms and the dining hall.
Workers at the Hotel Saentis in eastern Switzerland have spent Friday shoveling out hip-deep snow after a 300-meter (330-yard) wide avalanche smashed through the hotel’s windows Thursday afternoon and piled up in rooms and the dining hall.
Balkans suffering
The situation isn't much better in Eastern Europe and the
Balkans where the Bulgarian Red Cross said two snowboarders were killed died in
an avalanche in southwest Bulgaria’s Pirin Mountains.
In nearby Montenegro, the first 10 days of January have been
among the coldest the country has seen in decades.
About 2,000 soldiers and other emergency workers in Albania
were assigned to help people trapped by snow and to clear roads to
restore access to cutoff villages.
restore access to cutoff villages.
And in areas of for Bosnia-Herzegovina snow disrupted power
supplies and cut phone lines. Several towns and cities in southwest Serbia
introduced emergency measures, warning of snow piling up on the roads and
sealing off mountain villages.
Most schools in the area closed down, and 10 people had to
be rescued from their homes. Strong winds have complicated the work of
emergency crews.
And more snow is expected.
And more snow is expected.

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