Nearly 30 hurt on icy roads as snowstorm hits Germany, upends travel


A snowstorm and strong winds pounded northern and western Germany on Sunday, forcing trains to cancel trips and leading to hundreds of road accidents. Police said 28 people were injured on icy roads.

The German Weather Service DWD urged people to stay at home and authorities brought homeless people into warm shelters amid the sub-zero temperatures.

National train operator Deutsche Bahn said main train routes between Hamburg and Hanover, Berlin and the west were cancelled as snowdrifts piled up on the tracks and power lines. Some train connections in the east were also cancelled, though most of the snow came down in the northwest.

Police in the western state of North Rhine-Westphalia said early Sunday they had counted 222 accidents due to the bad weather conditions since Saturday afternoon. They said two people among the 28 were severely injured.

Parked cars are seen covered with snow during the snowfall in Gelsenkirchen, Germany on Sunday. (Martin Meissner/The Associated Press)

In the western city of Muenster, among the hardest hit places, there was so much snow on the streets that ambulances could no longer drive and all public transportation was shut down. More than 30 centimetres of snow had fallen, piling up to one metre in some parts, and more snow was expected to fall on Sunday.

In Wuppertal, in western Germany, firefighters had to rescue six passengers out of the city’s famous elevated railway after a train stopped moving due to the icy conditions. They had to climb up on ladders to reach the people on the train and help them down to the ground, dpa reported.

City authorities in the western town of Hagen walked through the streets at night waking up homeless people sleeping outside and taking them to shelters, the German news agency dpa reported. In Berlin, the capital’s biggest shelter, a tent city on the outskirts, was cleared early Saturday to make sure people don’t freeze to death in sub-zero temperatures.

Early Sunday, Kai-Uwe Scheffler and his girlfriend Karo were skiing through the town of Derenburg in eastern Germany. (Matthias Bein/dpa via The Associated Press)

While the west of the country was freezing, southern Germany experienced balmy, spring-like temperatures.

The unusual weather and temperature divide was caused by a polar vortex pushing icy air from the Arctic toward northern Germany just as a low pressure front brings wet, warm weather from the southwest, the DWD said.

Trains also halted in the Netherlands

In the Netherlands, snow blanketed much of the country, forcing the government to cancel a weekly crisis meeting to discuss the coronavirus pandemic. Train services were suspended and Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport warned passengers of possible flight cancellations.

National broadcaster NOS showed images of an early morning snowball fight involving locals and police on Amsterdam’s central Dam Square.



www.cbc.ca 2021-02-07 12:46:42

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