Hundreds of thousands have been left without power or stranded by transportation chaos as the storm Xaver is sweeping across northern Europe. At least nine people have died in the disaster.
Emergency services across the region battled overnight to sandbag
sodden dykes, evacuate flooded harbor areas and repair damage
from toppled trees that crashed onto houses, roads and power
lines.
Atlantic storm Xaver swept into northern Europe late Thursday
after disrupting transport and power in northern Britain where
two people have died.
The winds of up to 158 kilometers per hour barreled across
Germany, the Netherlands, Poland and southern parts of
Scandinavia.
Blackouts hit 400,000 homes in Poland and affected 50,000 people
in Sweden, while thousands of air passengers were stranded as
flights were canceled at Amsterdam, Berlin, Hamburg, Gdansk and
other airports, AFP reports.
In the Polish town of Poraj, the branch of a huge tree was thrown
into a car by a strong wind Friday. Three people were killed and
one injured in the accident, Reuters reports.
The disaster, considered the worst storm to hit the continent in
decades, also killed two people and injured dozens in the UK as
winds reached maximum speeds of 225 kilometers per hour. A truck
driver died when his vehicle overturned, with another man being
killed by a falling tree.
Around 10,000 Britons were evacuated from their homes in
low-lying east coast areas on Thursday, with the authorities
warning that the danger hasn’t passed yet.
The UK is facing the most serious tidal surge for more than 60
years as sea levels in some areas exceed those during the
devastating floods of 1953, which saw over 300 killed.
Several beachside houses, a lifeboat hut and a cafe fell into the
sea following the storm in Norfolk, the Daily Mail reports.
“It just happened so fast yesterday. One minute it was safe
and the next minute it was gone,” Steven Connelly, a
beachside house owner affected by the storm, told the paper.
The flood defenses erected in Britain after the 1953 events had
protected more than 800,000 homes, Owen Paterson, the UK’s
Environment Secretary, said after an emergency government meeting
Friday.
In Denmark, a 72-year-old female passenger of a truck died when
the vehicle overturned in howling winds.
Sweden’s coast guards are searching the sea for two sailors who
were washed off the deck of a Dutch cargo ship 22 kilometers, The
Local website reports.
Several ferry crossings to and from Sweden were canceled, with a
decision made to halt trains in the south of the country.
“We did not want to run the risk of crashing into a tree flying
at 160 kilometers an hour,” Linus Eriksson from Swedish rail
service SJ told the TT news agency. At least one person has
already died in the south of the country after a tree fell in the
fierce gusts of wind.
About 4,000 people remain without power in northern Germany, with
schools closed and about 70 flights at Hamburg airport canceled.
The country’s rail operator, Deutsche Bahn, said that the debris
blocked a high-speed line between the country’s largest cities,
Hamburg and Berlin.
Floodwaters in the port of Hamburg rose to 6 meters above normal
levels early Friday, the highest in decades, the officials said.
Meanwhile, Xaver continues moving eastward, with storm alert
declared in Kaliningrad, the western Russian enclave on the coast
of the Baltic Sea.