A man looks out of an icicle-hung window in Uzice, Serbia. At least 11,000 villagers in the country have been trapped by heavy snow in the mountains. Photograph: AP |
More than
120 cold-related deaths have been reported across eastern Europe, many among
homeless people, and at least 11,000 people are trapped by heavy snow in
mountain villages in Serbia.
Dr Milorad
Dramacanin, who took part in helicopter evacuations in central Serbia, said:
"The situation is dramatic, the snow is up to five metres high in some
areas, you can only see rooftops."
Up to 300
people are stranded in Bosnia, with choppers supplying food and medication.
Goran
Milat, one of those residents cut off, said: "We are thankful for this
help. But the snow did what it did and we are blocked here until spring."
The
conditions also forced the closure of the airport in Montenegro's capital
Podgorica.
In Poland,
where temperatures have dropped to -22C, officials have been trying to direct
homeless people away from derelict unheated buildings and into crammed
shelters.
Eleven people
around the country have died since Friday from carbon monoxide poisoning after
using charcoal heaters in sealed rooms.
In
Bulgaria, more than 1,000 schools are closed after some areas saw the lowest
temperatures since records began a century ago. Ukraine recorded deaths as the
mercury sank as low as -32.5C (-26.5F).
Germany saw
daytime temperatures on Thursday at below -10C, while Paris saw -8C and
Stockholm recorded -13C. Parts of Italy have struggled with heavy snow, with
freezing temperatures also seen in Greece and the Black Sea coast.
One nation
is hoping to make the best of the big freeze: the speed-skating obsessed Dutch.
Authorities have banned boats from some of Amsterdam's canals and turned off
pumps in the hope the still water will freeze over.
The
ambition is a sufficient stretch of ice to stage the Elfstedentocht – 11 Town
Tour – a 125-mile skate over frozen canals and lakes in the country's north. It
has only been staged 15 times since the first official event in 1909.
The US has
enjoyed a very mild winter, with unseasonably warm temperatures and a lack of
snow. But Pennsylvania's famous groundhog, Punxsutawney Phil, predicted six
more weeks of winter in his annual appearance in the spotlight.
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