Europe shivers in severe winter cold snap

28 Jan, 2005

Europe shivered Thursday in a severe cold snap as temperatures hovered below freezing across much of the continent, forcing train and plane delays and ratcheting up electricity consumption to record levels. In a ceremony marking the liberation 60 years ago of the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz, Poland world leaders stood in biting cold and softly falling snow pleading for the horrors of the Holocaust never to be forgotten.
Snow and sub-zero temperatures prevented new Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko, who attended the Auschwitz ceremony, from flying to Brussels to introduce himself to European Union members. And the arrival in Poland of Russian President Vladimir Putin was delayed for nearly 20 hours due to bad weather.
Eastern and central Europe bore the brunt of the wintry weather, with snow and high winds buffeting Bosnia, Croatia, the Czech Republic and Poland as temperatures hovered around minus eight degrees Celsius (18 Fahrenheit) in many areas.
In Romania, the pilot and co-pilot of a Hungarian mail plane were killed when the aircraft came down in heavy snow near the north-eastern Romanian town of Iasi. Authorities had been weighing whether to shut the airport when the plane crashed on approach.
Road traffic all but stopped in central Croatia as snow depths reached 1.20 meters (around four feet), breaking a record dating to 1954. Wind gusts in Croatia hit 180 kilometers per hour (110 mph) in some areas, as authorities shut down parts of the main north-south national highway to truck traffic.
France and Spain both broke electricity consumption records late on Wednesday, according to the state power companies - as people turned up thermostats.
Icy winds also swept across the Mediterranean hitting north Africa with heavy snowfall and freezing temperatures paralysing large parts of northern Algeria where 13 people were killed.

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