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One dead as heavy snow hits southeast Europe
by Staff Writers
Bucharest (AFP) Jan 26, 2012

A picture taken on January 23, 2012 shows Kiev-Pecherskaya Lavra's cathedral after a heavy snow-fall in the Ukrainian capital. Photo courtesy AFP.

A heavy winter snowstorm pummelled parts of southeastern Europe on Thursday, leaving at least one person dead, snarling road and air traffic and leaving thousands without power.

In the hardest hit parts of northern Bulgaria, snow drifts piled five-feet (1.5-metres) deep, forcing officials to scramble hundreds of off-road vehicles to clear clogged roads and tow stranded cars.

Across the border, in Romania's Giurgiu region, about 2,000 people were evacuated after they were stranded overnight in their cars on dozens of snow-clogged roads.

One man died of hypothermia after snow smothered his car. Rescuers saved a woman in the same vehicle.

Also in Romania, a pregnant woman delivered her baby in an ambulance that was stuck in the snow.

Bulgaria, meanwhile, declared its highest "code red" alert across the country after hundreds of homes were left without power and air and road freight traffic was disrupted.

The government's emergency response committee warned people to avoid all travel, as the snow, which began falling Wednesday, continued throughout the day.

The region of Lovech in northern Bulgaria and two small municipalities to the northwest, Svoge and Godech, declared a state of emergency, while some 300 towns and villages across the country were left without electricity.

In southern and central Serbia, several villages were unreachable, while people were running out of food and medicine, the B92 television channel reported.

Bucharest's airports cancelled about 40 flights, and train services were severely disrupted. Four ports on the Danube river and the Black Sea were also closed due to strong winds.

The Romanian meteorological institute said heavy snowfalls and strong winds could persist until Friday at noon in two regions close to the Black Sea.

Heavy snow halts freight traffic across Bulgaria
Sofia (AFP) Jan 26, 2012 - Bulgaria declared its highest "code red" alert across the country Thursday after heavy snowfall left hundreds of homes without power and disrupted air and road freight traffic.

The government's ad hoc emergency response committee advised people to avoid all travel, as heavy snow, which began falling on Wednesday, was forecast to continue all day.

In worst-hit northern Bulgaria, snowdrifts reached up to one and a half meters (five feet), the interior ministry said, dispatching 1,100 off-road vehicles to help clean up roads and tow stranded cars.

The region of Lovech in northern Bulgaria and two small municipalities to the northwest, Svoge and Godech, declared a state of emergency, while some 300 towns and villages across the country were left without electricity.

Road freight traffic was halted across Bulgaria as authorities banned heavy trucks from the roads to ease clean-up work and prevent accidents, the ministry said.

A snow blockade in neighbouring Romania briefly immobilised traffic overnight at the only bridge linking the two countries across the Danube, with hundreds of trucks stuck in parking lots near Ruse on the Bulgarian side, local authorities said.

Air traffic was also severely disrupted, with most incoming flights diverted to Skopje in Macedonia, Thessaloniki in Greece and Bucharest in Romania.

Bulgaria's biggest Black Sea port of Burgas meanwhile stopped work because of thick fog and banned all ship manoeuvres in the bay, the state BTA news agency reported.

Most of Bulgaria's high-altitude passes in the Balkan mountains were closed to all traffic, with snow chains obligatory in the Rila, Pirin and Rhodope mountains to the south, the road agency said.

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Southern Romania paralysed by snow
Bucharest (AFP) Jan 26, 2012 - Southern Romania was paralysed by heavy snow Thursday, with dozens of national roads cut off and 28 flights to and from Bucharest's airports cancelled, Prime Minister Emil Boc said.

Hundreds of people, including babies, spent the night stranded in cars. Most of them were rescued in the morning and found shelter in schools, local authorities said.

"I am calling on mayors to look after the homeless, knowing that temperatures will continue to drop," Boc told prefects during a video conference.

Around 30 trains were cancelled while dozens of others were running several hours late. Two rail lines were closed.

Twenty-eight villages in three departments were deprived of electricity, distribution company Enel said.

Four ports on the Danube and the Black Sea were also closed due to strong winds.

EU Commissioner for Regional Policy Johannes Hahn, who was expected in Bucharest had to cancel his trip because of the bad weather, his office said.



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