A wind-fallen tree squashes a parked car on the corner of
Grove End Road and Abbey Road in London January 18, 2007.
[Reuters]
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LONDON (AFP) - Hurricane force
winds battered parts of Europe, killing at least 27 people and triggering a
dramatic air-sea rescue from a sinking cargo ship in the English Channel.
The storms brought torrential rains and winds gusting at close to 170
kilometers per hour (105 miles per hour) to areas of southern Britain, northern
France, the Netherlands, Germany and the Czech Republic.
Falling trees and pylons claimed the lives of seven motorists, including the
managing director of central England's Birmingham airport, killed when a branch
fell on his car as he was driving to work.
In all, 10 people were killed in storm-related accidents in England, seven in
Germany, five in the Netherlands, three in the Czech Republic and two in France.
Many of the deaths were due to traffic accidents and falling debris.
Meteorologists at London's Met Office said the winds reached "severe gale
force" as they crossed Britain and were the highest recorded since January 1990.
But they warned that the system would intensify as it headed east across the
continent. Winds of almost 170 kph were recorded later Thursday in Germany.
"Denmark, Netherlands and Germany were expected to be more severely affected
by the storm as it tracked across them through this evening," the office said on
its website.
In Munich, an 18-month-old baby was crushed to death by a door that was torn
off its hinges, while a 73-year-old man was killed after a barn door fell on him
in Bavaria.
In the southern Dutch town of Riel an 11-year-old boy died after he was hit
by a car, whose driver said the child was blown into the car by a sudden gust of
wind.
A pensioner was crushed when a wall collapsed on her near Stockport in
northwest England, while a man was killed after being blown into a metal shutter
at an industrial estate in Manchester.
In the Czech Republic a fireman was killed by a falling tree, while two
youths were crushed when a tree fell on their car on the outskirts of the
capital Prague.
The high winds caused chaos across the country, cutting power lines and
disrupting transport with forecasters warning of worse in store during the
night.
In the English Channel, 26 crew who abandoned their sinking freighter were
airlifted to safety in a daring joint French-British operation launched in
hazardous conditions.
The French coastguard said all the men who had been huddling in a lifeboat
had been winched on board British Sea King helicopters and were taken to the
navy base at Culdrose in southwestern England.
They had been forced to leave their London-registered cargo ship, the MS
Napoli, after it developed a 1.5-metre (five-foot) gash just above the
waterline.
A spokesman for the British coastguard said the freighter was listing badly
off the Cornish coastline.
"We don't know yet whether it will go down," he said.
French coastguard officials said the ship was carrying hundreds of tonnes of
"dangerous" cargo including explosives and unspecified toxins, and a
five-kilometre slick of oil pollution had been detected behind the vessel.
The storms also forced the suspension of cross-Channel ferry services between
the English port of Dover and France and caused chaos to road and rail transport
in England.
German meteorologists said the storm was shaping up to be the worst in five
years and authorities warned people to go outside only in exceptional
circumstances. The winds led to numerous flight cancellations at Frankfurt
airport.
The head of the German rescue services, Albrecht Broemme, said tens of
thousands of emergency workers were on standby.
"If this hits all of Germany, things could become pretty bad," he said.
In Paris all public parks, gardens and cemeteries were closed as a precaution
until the end of the violent weather.
The Eurostar train service between Paris, Brussels and London was also
briefly suspended before services resumed later in the day.
The Dutch transport ministry took the unprecedented step of issuing a warning
asking all motorists to avoid getting on the road if possible.
Also the Red Cross was setting up temporary shelters for some 5,000 commuters
who are stranded after the Netherlands shut down all rail traffic.
In other transport chaos:
-- British Airways cancelled 130 domestic flights;
-- 100 flights were cancelled at Swiss airports;
-- A train driver was injured when his locomotive hit a fallen tree in the
Czech Republic;
-- Deutsche Bahn railway company halted services across Germany.
-- Amsterdam train station closed after glass plates were blown off the roof;
-- Prague airport banned the use of passenger tunnels due to safety
fears.