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Just as Europe thaws, snow storms hit US

Power outage closes main Moscow airport
Moscow (AFP) Dec 26, 2010 - Moscow's main airport closed to international traffic Sunday as unseasonably warm weather produced hail storms that wreaked havoc with the city's traffic and left shoppers navigating streets of ice. The heavy sleet downed transmission lines across central Russia and ground Moscow's traffic -- notorious at the best of times -- to a virtual halt. Domodedovo International Airport, which handles a daily average of more than 55,000 travellers, reported a total power outage at around 8:00 am (0500 GMT). The airport only managed to handle a handful of local flights, with about 8,000 people left stranded, according to the aviation authority. The city's second-largest airport Sheremetyevo remained open but also experienced hours-long delays on some international routes. It received 10 flights from Domodedovo before shutting to the extra traffic because of the weather, state television said.

By late Sunday Domodedovo remained without power, with generators providing electricity to a few offices and passengers making their way through the terminal by the light of mobile phones, an AFP photographer said. Airport employees were telling stranded passengers to go home but trains connecting the airport to Moscow weren't running and taxis were charging 10 times the normal price for a ride into the city. At Sheremetyevo, a woman whose Air France flight was cancelled said passengers were lining up at ticket offices hoping to change their flights. "Nothing is being explained, we aren't getting any answers," she told AFP. Temperatures in Russia's capital hovered around the freezing point throughout the weekend, producing unseasonable rain showers that turned the city into what one television station described as a "concrete skating rink". The warm front saw some residents putting mattresses on their cars to save them from massive icicles dropping from the city's buildings. Other were seen holding on to the walls of buildings as they carefully navigated the streets.

Moscow officials advised the city's 10-million-plus inhabitants to stay at home, with a mayor's office spokesman telling the Interfax news agency that people should not venture outside "unless there was an extreme emergency". The freezing rain also damaged power supply lines used by the city's trams and trolley buses, with officials ordering 96 extra buses onto the streets to cover the affected routes. "I wanted to leave the car at home and take the trolley, but those are not moving either," one man told NTV television while digging his car out from under the snow. Further problems were also reported on Moscow's suburban train routes. A spokesman told Interfax that there were delays throughout the region "affecting almost all the destination points". The deputy head of Moscow's regional government told state television that the power outages had affected 455 settlements around the city and other parts of central Russia, with 197,000 people left without electricity by midday. Moscow's December temperatures average about minus five degrees Celsius (23 degrees Fahrenheit), according to the Pogoda.ru weather website, with daily lows recorded at around minus eight degrees Celsius.
by Staff Writers
New York (AFP) Dec 26, 2010
Snow storms forced hundreds of flight cancellations at US airports Sunday, creating travel misery for thousands of Christmas travelers just as conditions in Europe began to ease.

As hundreds of passengers trapped by freezing weather in Paris and Brussels returned home after European flights resumed normal service on Christmas Day, it was the turn of those in the United States to shiver and face disruptions.

At the other end of the spectrum, Moscow's main airport was also closed to international traffic as unseasonably warm weather produced hail storms that wreaked havoc on the roads, downed transmission lines and terrified shoppers.

Across the Atlantic, the northeastern part of the United States was expected to bear the brunt of "dangerous" blizzard conditions and dumps that could approaching two feet (24 inches) in the Boston area.

Crews pre-treated roads with salt and prepared emergency vehicles in Washington, which was paralyzed for days by record snowfalls last year.

The capital looked set to escape the worst of the conditions this time around, but blizzard warnings were issued for coastal New England, parts of New Jersey and New York city.

The storm was expected to dump a total of between nine and 15 inches (22.8 to 38.1 centimeters) on the Big Apple as powerful wind gusts blow through the city.

Boston was forecast to receive up to 22 inches (55.9 centimeters) of the white stuff by Monday, with wind gusts as high as 45 miles (72 kilometers) per hour by that evening.

Maryland, Massachusetts, Virginia and North Carolina had all declared states of emergency to provide extra funding and resources to respond to the storm.

Heavy snow forced the NFL to postpone an American football game for the second time in three weeks -- this time for the Vikings-Eagles face-off in Philadelphia. The inflatable roof of the Minnesota Vikings's Metrodome collapsed during the last major storm earlier this month.

The storm was already bringing misery to travelers hoping to return home from their Christmas vacations. Many airlines waived fees for changing flights.

Delta Air Lines said one sixth of its flights around the country, some 850, had been canceled.

Continental Airlines canceled 265 departures, primarily from Newark Liberty International Airport, outside New York. It warned, though, that most domestic and international flights would be canceled through mid-morning Monday due to the disruption at its main hub.

United Airlines had already canceled 110 flights -- in Boston, Philadelphia and the three main New York airports: Newark, LaGuardia and John F. Kennedy International.

"We're trying to accommodate our travelers. We issued a travel waiver for travel from the 25th to the 27th to give our customers the opportunity to change their plans if possible," United spokesman Mike Trevino told AFP.

"We tried to pre-cancel as many flights as we could so customers wouldn't have to go to the airport only to find that their flight was canceled."

AirTran Airways cancelled 81 flights to the northeast cities expected to be hardest hit, including New York, Boston and Philadelphia.

Southwest Airlines also canceled flights, mainly to and from Dulles International Airport and Baltimore Washington International Airport outside Washington, as well as Newark.

"We know many people are traveling for the holidays and we want everyone to be extremely cautious," North Carolina Emergency Management Director Doug Hoell told a local television station.

"Anyone who is thinking of driving during the next few days, should pay careful attention to the weather and traffic forecasts before heading out."

Ice and snow snarled road traffic in several southeastern states, including Georgia's northern mountains. North Carolina's department of transportation reported interstate highways partially covered with snow and ice.

Americans in the deep south were treated to a very rare white Christmas Saturday.

Light to moderate snow blanketed communities in the southern Gulf states of Alabama and Mississippi, meteorologists said, while Atlanta, Georgia enjoyed its first white Christmas in 128 years.

Snowfalls were expected to break records in the normally mild south, where at least the children were pleasantly surprised by the winter weather.



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Every winter, Russia's most European city battles traditional Russian problems as snow blocks streets and falling icicles injure and even kill pedestrians. Amid severe winter, the former capital of the Russian tsars - conceived by Peter the Great as a "window to Europe" for a country which stretches to the Pacific - Saint Petersburg suffers from problems unimaginable in Western Europe. ... read more







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