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Deep freeze claims more lives in Europe
by Staff Writers
Warsaw (AFP) Feb 1, 2012

Two dead as temperatures plummet to record lows in Bulgaria
Sofia (AFP) Feb 1, 2012 - Two more people have died in Bulgaria amid a cold snap that has seen temperatures drop to their lowest levels in a century in some parts of the country, weather officials and media said on Wednesday.

Sixteen weather stations recorded overnight the lowest temperatures since records began being kept 100 years ago, including minus 29.4 degrees Celsius (minus 20.9 Fahrenheit) in the northeastern city of Knezha, said the national weather service.

The mercury dipped to minus 31.4 Celsius in the northern town of Sevlievo, the lowest in the country overnight, though not a record to the town, it said.

Two more people were reported to have died by local media, bringing the toll to 10 since the start of the current cold snap last week. Most were homeless or elderly people who lost their way home and were left stranded out in the cold, media reported.

The toll could not be confirmed as Bulgarian authorities have not published any official figures on the deaths.

Over 400 schools remained closed Wednesday due to a flu epidemic, insufficient heating or icy roads that prevented children from getting to classes.

The country's Danube exploration agency meanwhile said that the river began to partially freeze Wednesday all along the 350-kilometre stretch between the ports of Lom and Silistra. There was no imminent risk to shipping, it added.

Bulgarian households also surpassed Tuesday night their previous electricity consumption record set last January, the electricity system operator announced.

Reserve coal and hydropower capacities were switched on to guarantee electricity supplies.


Europe shivered in some of the coldest temperatures in decades Wednesday as the death toll soared past 80 and countries battled to clear snow from roads and railways.

At least 28 people froze to death overnight in eastern and central Europe, while countries further west and south began to feel the frigid effects of a cold front spreading from Siberia.

In Ukraine, officials said 13 people had died of hypothermia over the past 24 hours, bringing the overall toll there to 43 over the past six days.

Most were homeless people who froze to death on the streets, but seven died in their homes and more than 800 sought medical help for frostbite and hypothermia as temperatures plunged to minus 30 degrees Celsius (minus 22 Fahrenheit) in some regions.

Even Greece saw temperatures plunge past freezing in some places, leading to the death of at least one homeless man on the island of Crete and another fatality when an African migrant froze to death in the Evros river along the country's border with Turkey.

"We are praying that there will be no homeless deaths in Athens," said Dimitra Noussi, the supervisor at a shelter in the Greek capital. "We are doing the best we can, street teams are sent out every night with food and blankets, but it's not easy as these people are very vulnerable."

Poland reported five people found dead overnight, bringing the overall toll to 20 since temperatures plummeted there on Friday. The victims were mostly homeless.

Others died after getting drunk and falling asleep outdoors, police said, as officials reported temperatures diving to minus 30C in parts of the country.

In Slovakia, two people died as temperatures hit minus 24C (minus 11.2F), the daily newspaper SME reported.

And in the neighbouring Czech Republic, a 47-year-old homeless man was found frozen to death in the eastern city of Karvina, where the mercury has dipped to minus 29C (minus 20F).

In central Serbia, an 80-year-old man was found dead in the snow.

Italy struggled to clear motorways and railways after heavy snow falls that also blanketed the French Mediterranean island of Corsica.

In Romania, six people died over the past 24 hours, bringing the toll to 14 over the past six days, the health ministry announced. One of the victims was a baby who died in an unheated house in the northeastern town of Iasi.

A total of 346 people, homeless or suffering from hypothermia, have been taken to hospital or rescue centres over the past 24 hours as temperatures fell to minus 32.5C (minus 26.5F) in the centre of the country, officials said.

In Bulgaria, two people died in the coldest weather in a century in some parts of the country, bringing the overall toll to 10.

The temperature sank to minus 29.4C (minus 20.9F) in the northeastern city of Knezha and minus 31.4C in the northern town of Sevlievo.

Guntars Grauss, director of Latvia's state medical centre, told the Delfi news portal that five men and two women had died in the final week of January when temperatures were at their lowest.

In Italy, where bad weather halted all work around the beached cruise liner Costa Concordia, forecasters predicted more snow and colder temperatures in the days ahead, with a low of minus 20C (minus 4F) in the Alps.

In France, five men serving in the French Foreign Legion were buried by an avalanche while training in the Alps.

They were dug out by members of their brigade but one of the legionnaires died of a heart attack during the accident, the commander of French mountain troops Herve Wattecamps said.

Meanwhile, temperatures dipped to between minus 18C (minus 0.4) and minus 25C in parts of the north of the country.

Parts of north-east and central France have also been placed under "deep cold" watch until 7 a.m. (0600 GMT)

"We are seven degrees below the average of the season in both north and south," forecaster Dominique Raspaud said.

In Corsica, most mountain passes were closed by heavy snow and power cuts hit some 60,000 homes in the island and neighbouring French mainland.

But the Dutch were putting on their skates, staging the first marathon of the season on natural ice and hoping their canals would be sufficiently frozen to hold a classic 200-kilometre (125-mile race) for the first time since 1997.

burs/wat/hmn

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43 people die in Ukraine cold snap: ministry
Kiev (AFP) Feb 1, 2012 - A deadly cold snap has killed 43 people in Ukraine over the past six days as temperatures plunged across the country, the emergency services said Wednesday.

All are believed to have died from hypothermia, the emergency situations ministry said, as the freezing conditions caught residents of the ex-Soviet country unprepared.

More than half of the people were found dead in the street, while seven people died at home and eight in hospital.

More than 850 people sought medical help for frostbite and hypothermia, with most of them hospitalised.

Authorities have opened 1,735 shelters where people can warm up and get a hot meal, and are planning to set up 122 more, as temperatures fell to minus 30 degrees Celsius (minus 18 Fahrenheit) in some regions.

Around 31,500 people have used the respite centres since Friday, the emergenies ministry said.

Prime Minister Mykola Azarov ordered police and doctors to give assistance to homeless people and direct them towards the shelters.

The authorities closed more than 3,000 schools on Monday in 16 regions, giving almost half a million children an unexpected holiday.

City authorities in Kiev said all the capital's schools would be closed at least until February 5 and possibly for longer.

Azarov urged citizens to economise on hot water and electricity, while assuring them that Ukraine had enough gas, coal and fuel to power the centralised heating systems that give residents heating and hot water.

Russia's Inter RAO UES utility company said it would supply up to 500 megawatts of electricity at Ukraine's request between Wednesday and February 5, in an agreement covering the next month.

"This agreement was initiated by the Ukrainian side due to the abnormally cold weather across most of the country, which has prompted a shortage of electricity," the company said in a statement.

The company said that it was also considering importing energy from a hydroelectric power station in the ex-Soviet republic of Moldova to supply the south and south-western regions of Ukraine.

Russia and Ukraine have regular spats over natural gas prices and Russia cut off its gas supplies to Ukraine in 2008, leading to severe shortages in some European countries amid freezing winter weather.



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