Showing posts with label bosnia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bosnia. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

NEWS,08.02.2012

Aid sent by helicopter as thousands remain cut off in Europe

Helicopters ferried food and medicine to iced-in villagers on Wednesday as Europe's 12-day-old cold snap tightened its frigid grip on the continent, where more than 400 have died as a direct result. Eastern countries such as Poland and Ukraine account for more than half this total, and dozens more have succumbed to the weather's secondary effects, such as asphyxiation by shoddy heating. Heavy snows eased in Bosnia but the bitter cold continued, especially in the south and southeast, where temperatures dropped to minus 20 degrees Celsius (minus 4 Fahrenheit.)Thousands struggled without power, including around the historic city of Mostar, where some 15,000 homes lacked electricity.Uma Sinanovic, a spokeswoman for Bosnia's defence ministry, said areas around Nevesinje and Berkovici in the country's south were especially hard hit."The electricity has been down for two days, phone lines are also down in that region," Dragan Stark of the Bosnian Serb civil protection service added. "It's a disaster.” Bosnian authorities on Wednesday sent civilian and military helicopters to isolated hamlets near Mostar and Kalinovic, bringing much-needed supplies and ferrying sick people to hospitals.Five choppers delivered basic foodstuffs like flour and oil, lowering the supplies down by rope when landings were impossible.The Bosnian authorities said that two more people had died from the cold in the rugged mountainous Balkan nation, raising the toll to seven, while Albania had its first victim, a man aged 37 found dead near Tirana.Russian authorities announced at least 110 people had died as a result of the cold so far this year, 44 of them in the first week of February alone.” Weather like this is only once in five years, it's usually much warmer," Moscow resident Pavel Sterlikov said.
 
Elsewhere, icebreakers were hard at work to clear parts of the Danube, one of Europe's main arterial waterways, with stretches of hundreds of kilometres (miles) frozen between Croatia and Serbia.Serbia's ministry for infrastructure and energy banned navigation along all waterways within the country, including the Danube, Sava and Tisa rivers, because they were frozen, Beta news agency reported. Deputy minister Pavle Galic told the agency the rivers could be closed for as long as 10 days.More than 70,000 people remain cut off from the outside world in Serbia and other Balkan countries. In southern Croatia more than 100 villages were still isolated for the sixth consecutive day. Miserable conditions persisted in Bulgaria, with violent snowstorms raging in the Danube plain in the northeast, where all traffic has been suspended since Tuesday and where the main border crossing with Romania was closed due to ice. Four more people were found dead under the snow in the Pernik region in the west of the country, raising the number killed by the cold to 20.At least eight people drowned Monday after rivers flooded and a burst dam sent freezing waters into the village of Biser. Authorities continued to search for two missing residents and Bulgaria announced a national day of mourning. Officials warned that heavy snow storms could trigger floods when the spring melt begins, and the government was implementing urgent measures to strengthen dams and riverbeds. Ukraine remained the worst-affected country, with hundreds of cars stranded on the Crimean peninsula and at least 131 deaths so far attributed to the cold, while three more people froze to death in Romania, bringing that country's total to 41.
The Hungarian Central Bank, meanwhile, said it literally had money to burn to help the country's homeless. The bank has been pulping wads of its retired forint banknotes and turning them into briquettes, which make useful heating fuel. Famished wolves scavenged in the isolated, snow-covered Italian
village of Trasacco, while keepers at the Berlin zoo imposed a cold-related curfew on the giraffes and antelopes, which will be kept inside for all but 2.5 hours each day.

Pope Benedict XVI urged Catholics and religious organisations Wednesday to show solidarity and generosity to victims of the cold. While conditions have been brutal for much of
Europe, residents in the Netherlands were waiting with bated breath to see if the country's canals would freeze hard enough to allow a legendary ice-skating race to take place. For the so-called Elfstedentocht (11 city) race to take place for the first time in 15 years, the ice needs to be at least 15 centimetres (six inches) thick along the entire 200-kilometre (124-mile) route, but ice cover remains patchy along some stretches. Canals were also frozen in the heart of Paris and the city authorities brought out their only ice-breaker, a barge equipped with a snow plough.

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

NEWS,31.01.2012.

More than 60 dead in Eastern Europe cold snap


       A woman carries fire wood on a street in Bucharest as she deals with the cold snap 

More than 60 people have died in a cold snap across Eastern Europe, authorities said on Tuesday, forcing some countries to call in the army to help secure food and medical supplies and set up emergency shelters for the homeless. The temperature in Ukraine sank to minus 33 degrees Celsius, the coldest in six years, while eastern Bosnia experienced lows of minus 31C and Poland, Romania and Bulgaria minus 30C.Forecasters said the cold spell would last until Friday with further heavy snow expected across the region on Wednesday. At least 30 people, most of them homeless, have died in Ukraine in the past five days, the Emergencies Ministry said. Another 500 people were treated in hospital for frostbite and other cold-related ailments. January temperatures in Ukraine do not normally sink below minus 15C. The ministry said 1600 centres had been set up to provide shelter and hand out food for the homeless. Five people died in Bulgaria and eight in Romania, where troops were called in last week to rescue hundreds of people stranded in cars by blizzards. The Black Sea was frozen around the Romanian resort of Mamaia, and across the border in Bulgaria a salt lake froze for the first time in 58 years. Five people were reported dead in Poland overnight, bringing to 15 the number to have died since temperatures dropped at the weekend. Several suffered carbon monoxide poisoning from old or faulty heaters, the Interior Affairs Ministry said. At least three people have died in heavy snow in Serbia's mountain regions to the south and southeast. Authorities declared a state of emergency in 13 municipalities and deployed the army and fire-fighters to get supplies to remote villages.” The situation is gradually being restored to normal," said Predrag Maric, head of the Interior Ministry's emergency situations department. Dozens of villages were cut off by two metres of snow in eastern Bosnia, where the frozen body of a man was found at the weekend.