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Frigid Arctic air, winter storms grip much of US
By Francois Picard with Chris Lefkow in Washington
Houston (AFP) Feb 16, 2021

Ukraine man invents murder to get snow cleared
Kiev (AFP) Feb 15, 2021 - A Ukrainian man reported a fictitious murder in the hope that police would clear his snow-covered road when they came to arrest him, regional authorities said on Monday.

The man called police on Saturday evening to tell them he had killed his mother's partner by stabbing him in the chest.

"But at the same time he immediately warned the police that they should come to him along with a snow plough, because there is no other way to get to him," Yuliya Kovtun, police spokeswoman for the northern Chernihiv regional police, told AFP.

She said officers did not take a snow plough and were able to get to the man's house in an SUV.

"Immediately after arriving, they discovered that the relative was indeed at the house, but in one piece and unharmed -- no one had attacked him," she said, adding that the would-be killer immediately confessed to making a fake call.

Kovtun said municipal services had ploughed the road earlier on Saturday but he "was not satisfied with the quality of the clearing".

The man, from the village of Grybova Rudnya, now faces a fine of up to 119 hryvnias (3.50 euros; $4.30) for reporting a false complaint.

Ukraine has been hit with record snowfall in recent days, with some 50 centimetres (20 inches) blanketing the country.

The ex-Soviet nation of 40 million is one of the poorest countries in Europe, and has struggled to battle endemic corruption and upgrade ageing infrastructure.

Greek travel chaos after heavy snowfall
Athens (AFP) Feb 15, 2021 - Greek travellers faced major disruption to road and sea transport on Monday after strong winds and heavy snowfall that have made conditions even more miserable in the country's migrant camps.

Over the past few days the United Nations' refugee agency, the UNHCR, has sent radiators to the camps around the country where tens of thousands of asylum seekers have been struggling with the cold and hail.

Along with northern Greece where sub-zero temperatures are common at this time of year, snow blanketed Athens' northern and eastern suburbs Monday, with traffic on the main motorway to northern hub Thessaloniki cut off for several hours.

Greece's civil protection agency warned of "continuing dangerous weather conditions" as strong winds battered the coast, forcing a halt to ferry services connecting Athens with Greece's Aegean islands.

Some villages on the island of Evia near Athens were facing power cuts as well as blocked roads.

Greece's weather agency said the "low temperatures, ice and snowfall" would continue on Tuesday, with the civil protection agency recommending that people avoid travel.

On the island of Lesbos, where more than 6,000 asylum seekers are currently living, "no one is in danger in the camp," insisted asylum service secretary Manos Logothetis.

"We are working every day to improve the conditions in the camps on the islands," he told local media.

Lesbos' squalid Moria migrant camp was ravaged by two fires in September.

It has since been replaced by a hastily-erected temporary encampment in an area prone to flooding and strong winds.

Aid groups have denounced the poor conditions and the lack of infrastructure on the site, while media outlets have complained that they are banned from entering.

Much of the United States was in the icy grip of an "unprecedented" winter storm Monday as frigid Arctic air sent temperatures plunging, forcing hundreds of flight cancellations, making driving hazardous and leaving millions without power in Texas.

Texas Governor Greg Abbott issued a disaster declaration for the southern state, and the National Weather Service (NWS) said more than 150 million Americans were under winter weather advisories.

"I urge all Texans to remain vigilant against the extremely harsh weather," Abbott said in a statement.

The NWS described conditions as an "unprecedented and expansive area of hazardous winter weather" from coast-to-coast.

More than 2.7 million people were without power in Texas, according to PowerOutage.US, and temperatures in the major metropolis of Houston dipped to 16 degrees Fahrenheit (minus nine Celsius).

"We woke up this morning, our pipes are all frozen and we have no water in the house," Burke Nixon, a resident of Houston, told AFP.

President Joe Biden issued an emergency declaration for Texas on Sunday providing federal assistance to supplement state relief efforts.

Texas is not used to such brutal winter weather, and the storm caused havoc in parts of the state, including a 100-car pile-up on Interstate 35 near Fort Worth last week that left at least six people dead.

"It's lovely to see the white but very dangerous at the same time because people here don't know how to drive in it. You know they're driving too fast," said Michael, a Houston resident who gave only his first name.

Austin-Bergstrom International Airport said that all flights had been cancelled on Monday due to the "historic weather," and Houston's George Bush Intercontinental Airport also shut down.

The NWS said Arctic air was driving a "polar plunge" that is expected to bring record-low temperatures.

Much of the United States has been shivering under chilly temperatures for days, with about half of all Americans now under some sort of winter weather warning.

Temperatures have dropped across the country, with only parts of the southeast and southwest dodging it.

The cold snap has led to heavy snowfalls and ice storms that have caused a spike in electricity demand and power outages.

- 'Polar plunge' -

Besides Texas, weather-related emergencies have also been declared in Alabama, Oregon, Oklahoma, Kansas, Kentucky and Mississippi.

More than 300,000 customers are without power in Oregon.

"Over 150 million Americans are currently under winter storm warnings, ice storm warnings, winter storm watches, or winter weather advisories as impactful winter weather continues from coast to coast," the NWS said.

"This impressive onslaught of wicked wintry weather across much of the Lower 48 (states) is due to the combination of strong Arctic high pressure supplying sub-freezing temperatures and an active storm track escorting waves of precipitation."

The NWS said record low temperatures were expected in much of the country.

"Hundreds of daily low maximum and minimum temperatures have been/will be broken during this prolonged 'polar plunge,' with some February and even all-time low temperature records in jeopardy," it said.

In a large area known as the southern Plains that spans parts of Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas, temperatures are expected to fall well below typical readings for the time of year.

"Temperature anomalies are likely to be 25 to 45 degrees (Fahrenheit) below normal for much of the central and southern Plains," the NWS said.

It said six to 12 inches (15 to 30 centimeters) of snow were forecast from the Ohio Valley and eastern Great Lakes to northern New England.

Florida will remain the warmest spot in the continental United States, with highs above normal and temperatures generally around 80 degrees Fahrenheit.

The extreme weather in the United States triggered a massive blackout in northern Mexico that left some three million people without power, as natural gas supplies across the border were disrupted.

"Of the 4,766,901 users in the northern region of the country, 3,088,517 were affected and so far the electricity service has been restored to 65 percent," Mexico's Federal Electricity Commission announced on Twitter.

It said freezing gas pipelines had triggered "significant" cuts in gas supplies from the US, which affected local power plants that depend on the fuel in northern Mexico -- itself suffering from plunging temperatures.


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Moscow braces for record-breaking 'snowpocalypse'
Moscow (AFP) Feb 10, 2021
Moscow was bracing Wednesday for record snowfalls over the weekend, as weather experts predicted a record-breaking "snow apocalypse" in the Russian capital. Top expert of the Fobos weather centre Yevgeny Tishkovets said that the snowstorm would strike Moscow with "very high intensity" from the early hours of Friday and last for the next 36 hours. He added that winds would reach speeds of 15-20 metres per second while temperatures would drop to as low as -15 degrees Celsius (5 degrees Fahrenhei ... read more

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