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Hundreds dead in Eastern Europe cold wave


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Post Fri Feb 03, 2012 7:19 pm

Hundreds dead in Eastern Europe cold wave

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2012/feb2012/cold-f03.shtml
Hundreds Die From the Cold in Eastern Europe, Markuz Salzmann.

The wave of cold weather that has swept over large parts of Europe has resulted in the deaths of hundreds of people in eastern Europe within the space of a few days. According to the Ukraine Emergency Ministry’s web site, the number of deaths had risen to 63 over the past six days in Ukraine, with 945 people hospitalised with frostbite. The extreme weather has claimed 35 lives in Poland since January 24, and 22 people have died in Romania, many of them homeless, according to Realitatea TV.
The real death toll is likely to be much higher. Initial statistics concentrate on urban areas and neglect the large proportion of the population, often elderly and poor, living in the countryside. In addition, some eastern European countries do not collect statistics for such deaths.
The Emergency Ministry in Ukraine announced that more than 30 people had frozen to death on the streets, 8 had died in hospitals and 7 in their homes. The hospitals in the country are hopelessly overcrowded, with many patients remaining for longer periods in clinics for their treatment.
The situation is similar in other eastern European countries. Russia has more than 100,000 homeless, whose lives are now threatened by the cold. Parts of the Black Sea have frozen near the Romanian coast, and ice has blocked the passage of ships in the port of Tomis. Six people died of hypothermia within 24 hours, according to the Ministry of Health. Although it has not snowed for days, many roads are closed due to snowdrifts.
The hardest-hit regions of Romania are in the east and south of the country. In Covasna County, temperatures fell to minus 31 degrees (Celsius)(-24 deg F), while the capital city Bucharest registered minus 22 degrees.(-8 deg F)
In Bulgaria, 16 cities reported the coldest temperatures for over 100 years. Bulgaria, officially the poorest country in Europe, proclaimed its second-highest alert level as temperatures across the country plummeted to minus 29 degrees. An additional problem is a flu epidemic that has resulted in a number of deaths, mainly of elderly people. More than 450 schools in the country closed due to the cold, and eight deaths were recorded last weekend as a result of the cold snap.
The Baltic states are also badly affected. In the Lithuanian capital, Vilnius, at least two people froze to death. In the early hours of Tuesday, in southeast Estonia, temperatures fell to minus 27.5 degrees, and in Latvia and Lithuania, governments called on parents to keep their children at home. Temperatures will fall further in the coming days to reach minus 30 degrees in many regions.
[Short account follow from Serbia, Bosnia, Poland and the Czech Republic].....
Chaotic conditions also prevail in Turkey. Hundreds of villages are completely cut off from the outside world due to the weather conditions. In particular, numerous roads in eastern Anatolia are completely impassable due to the unusual snowfall.
In northern Greece, temperatures dropped to minus 12 degrees(10 deg F), an unusual level for the country. Many ferries were cancelled due to storms in the Aegean. Freezing temperatures prevailed in Athens, where 20,000 people are homeless in the wake of the country’s severe economic crisis.
All across the region, it is the homeless who are hardest hit by the freezing temperatures.......
In addition, energy prices are rising in all affected countries while wages and public spending are being cut. Many families cannot afford to pay their heating bills. An estimated 15 percent of households in Bulgaria and Romania have no, or only irregular, access to electricity and gas.......
The medical care for victims of the cold is also deplorable. In many countries, medical treatment is only available by paying cash. Vaccines are in short supply in Bulgaria, where the cold weather is accompanied by a flu pathogen. In the Baltic states, the health system has broken down almost completely. In Latvia, 40 percent of hospitals in the country have been closed in the last four years.
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the violently vicious and voracious violation of volition! (V For Vendetta)

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Post Sat Feb 04, 2012 7:14 am

Re: Hundreds dead in Eastern Europe cold wave

I think this is highly correlated with the slowing of the Atlantic conveyor. Are you ready for Siberian winters in Europe?
My doomstead is my gift to the future when I'm gone.
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Post Sat Feb 04, 2012 10:24 am

Re: Hundreds dead in Eastern Europe cold wave

Swampman wrote:I think this is highly correlated with the slowing of the Atlantic conveyor. Are you ready for Siberian winters in Europe?



The atmosphere is on steroids now.

Like a baby splashing in the bathtub. The Highs are higher.
The Lows are lower.

Positive feedback loops are doing that butterfly wing flap thingy... :? 8-)

I'm expecting 115 degrees in Kanasa City this summer.

Looking for a way to cool my tomatoes at night, so I won't
repeat last year's disaster.

O and Putin says Russia comes first so stop complaining about Gazprom dropping gas shipment s by 10%... :roll:

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Post Sat Feb 04, 2012 8:19 pm

Re: Hundreds dead in Eastern Europe cold wave

mcgowanjm wrote:
Looking for a way to cool my tomatoes at night, so I won't
repeat last year's disaster.


Try shade? Or is this more of a garden topic?

We do a chunk of ours in buckets, and then I just dolly them inside, outside, shade or sun, year around.

Pretty simple and primitive, and we get the whole range -- too cold, too hot, too much sun, etc. -- around Dallas.


O and Putin says Russia comes first so stop complaining about Gazprom dropping gas shipment s by 10%... :roll:



Not the first time. That is the way Russia rolls and why Russia is still around.

IF the Eastern European / former Soviet Block is not used to that game, yet . . . .
"If I had asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses." attributed to Henry Ford.

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Post Fri Feb 10, 2012 3:03 pm

Re: Hundreds dead in Eastern Europe cold wave

http://www.cnn.com/2012/02/10/world/europe/europe-cold-snap/index.html?hpt=hp_t3
Ice grips Europe's waterways as deadly cold lingers, Laura Smith-Spark, CNN, updated 12:01 PM EST, Fri February 10, 2012

London (CNN) -- Europe remained gripped by frigid temperatures and snow Friday, with the icy weather closing much of the Danube River to shipping and disrupting travel across the region.
Central and Eastern Europe have borne the brunt of the unseasonably bitter weather, which has led to hundreds of deaths and thousands of cases of frostbite and hypothermia.
Twenty-two countries have posted warnings for extreme cold temperatures and accumulating snow, CNN meteorologist Brandon Miller said.
The big freeze is not likely to end any time soon, Miller said, with the Arctic air forecast to continue spilling deep into Europe, keeping temperatures well below average and allowing the snow to continue to pile higher and higher.
In Ukraine, the worst-affected country, well over 100 people have died and more than 3,000 have sought hospital treatment.
State news agency Ukrinform said more than 120 ships -- most of them foreign -- were trapped in the Kerch Strait, linking the Sea of Azov to the Black Sea, because of ice.
Parts of the Danube River, one of the most important rivers in Europe for commerce, have nearly frozen over for the first time in 25 years.
That has led at least four countries to halt shipping along sections of the 1,700-mile-long waterway because of the risk of damage to vessels' hulls. The river is also used for drinking water, irrigation and tourism.
The stretch of the Danube running through Romania has been closed indefinitely to traffic, Romanian state television network TVR reported Friday. However, most roads had reopened as of late Thursday, TVR reported, although major problems remain on the country's rail network.
Romania's capital, Bucharest, reached a low of -24 degrees C [-11 deg F]for the second morning running Friday, its lowest temperature since the cold snap began two weeks ago.
Bucharest has not seen the mercury climb above the 0 degree Celsius (32 degrees Fahrenheit) freezing point since January 24, Miller said. The average high for this time of year is 3 degrees Celsius (37 degrees Fahrenheit).
Snow is lying 11 inches deep in Bucharest but has piled up even higher to the west, in Bosnia and Herzegovina, where the capital, Sarajevo, has seen over 39 inches accumulate in the past two weeks, Miller said. A year ago, the city was covered by less than half an inch of snow.
The Balkan Peninsula has been hammered with a series of potent snow storms, the result of a jet stream that has sagged much farther south than normal, allowing storms to pick up moisture over the waters of the Mediterranean and Aegean Seas and dump it on the already frozen landscape of the Balkans, Miller added.
In Serbia, the death toll from the cold snap rose to 16 on Friday, Interior Ministry emergencies official Predrag Maric told Serbian state news agency Tanjug.
The situation has improved, he is quoted as saying, since the government declared a state of emergency in 38 municipalities. Authorities are now focusing on getting food to people in the worst-affected areas, the news agency said.
Five more people died of hypothermia overnight in Poland, according to the Interior Ministry, the website of the publicly funded Polish Radio reported, taking the total number of cold related deaths there to 97.
Turkish Airlines, the national flag carrier for Turkey, canceled 57 domestic and international flights Friday because of severe weather, the semiofficial Anatolian news agency reported.
In a sign of the extreme weather conditions, the city hospital in Split, Croatia, has used two years' supply of plaster in only five days; a result of treating the high number of fractures caused by slips on the snowy and icy terrain, Miller said.
South-east and western Europe can also expect more wintry weather over the weekend.
Italy is braced Friday for heavy snowfall, with more than 40 deaths blamed on the cold snap so far, according to reports.
La Repubblica newspaper said it was expected to be the most difficult weekend for more than a decade, with the icy conditions extending as far south as Calabria. [Italy's "heel"]
Schools and offices were closed in Rome as city workers prepared to cope with as much as a foot of snow overnight. The mayor has issued an order requiring drivers to carry snow chains, and extra salt has been stockpiled for use on the roads.
Heavy snowfall a week ago paralyzed roads and trains in many cities across Italy, leading to wide criticism of authorities.
The number of beds available for homeless people in Rome has almost doubled, from 1,300 to 2,500, and new shelters have been set up in many metro stations, which are being kept open overnight, officials said........
The center-north regions of Emilia Romagna, Abruzzo and Marche, where it has been snowing for several days, have been particularly affected by the bad weather. Local trains are suspended.
In the northern Italian city of Trieste, an icy wind is blowing at more than 80 miles per hour and is expected to strengthen, according to the regional civil protection agency. An alert has been issued for strong winds over the next 36 hours, as people in the city report finding it difficult to remain standing in the gusts.
The famous canals of Venice started freezing over this week, preventing gondoliers from plying their trade on the city's picturesque waterways.
Many parts of England and Wales saw snow Thursday night and Friday morning.
Vow to vanquish the venal and virulent vermin vanguarding vice and vouchsafing
the violently vicious and voracious violation of volition! (V For Vendetta)

SHIT SUCKS! MOVE ON! - Allissun

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Post Tue Feb 14, 2012 7:16 pm

Re: Hundreds dead in Eastern Europe cold wave

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2012/feb2012/cold-f14.shtml
Death Toll Rises to 600 in European Cold Snap, Markus Salzmann.

The spate of cold weather that has lasted for weeks in many parts of Europe has now claimed at least 600 lives. Eastern Europe is the worst affected. The main reason for the high number of deaths is not the extreme cold temperatures per se, but rather the drastic austerity measures implemented in recent years and the widespread destruction of social infrastructure.
In the Ukraine [No, it's Ukraine, no "the." Does anyone say "the Russia"?], more than 150 deaths have been registered. Sixty-eight people have reportedly died in Poland from the cold, 64 in Russia and an estimated 70 in Belarus. In Romania, the official death toll has risen to 68. In Lithuania, 23 deaths have been reported, 24 in the Czech Republic and 10 in Latvia. At least 16 people have died so far due to the cold in Bulgaria, 13 in Hungary, and a total of 50 in the successor states of Yugoslavia.
Italy has also been severely affected by the cold, with 40 registered victims. In Abruzzo and Emilia Romagna, the army was mobilized to supply food to residents snowed under in mountain communities. Even in Rome, traffic came to a halt for a few days due to heavy snow, and gas supplies were disrupted.
Turkey has also been affected by snow, storms and floods. Dozens of flights were cancelled due to bad weather at Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport and ferry services from Istanbul across the Marmara Sea were halted. In Edirne, on the Bulgarian border, several rivers burst their banks after a dam collapsed on the Bulgarian side of the border. The main border crossing between Turkey and Bulgaria was closed due to flooding.
The current weather conditions are extreme—in Serbia, the temperature has dropped on occasion to minus 36 degrees [C, i.e. -33 deg F] and many regions of Bulgaria have recorded the lowest temperatures for a hundred years. But the bad weather has lead to fatalities following years of neglect of the technical and social infrastructure, combined with the impoverishment of broad layers of society. Electricity and gas supplies have broken down in many places, and where they are still intact many cannot afford to pay for the high cost of energy.
In Serbia, electricity is in short supply. At current consumption rates a normal supply of electricity can be secured for only a few days, the Department of Energy warned in Belgrade. The closure of schools due to the cold is to be extended by a further week. On television, the authorities called upon the population to conserve power.
Caritas worker Sigried Spindlbeck reported on the situation in Belarus to the Austrian newspaper Kleine Zeitung. Temperatures have dropped as low as minus 35 degrees. Every day some 40 people are admitted to hospitals with frostbite. A number of villages are partially cut off from the outside world.......
In Bulgaria, the movement of ships on the Danube has come to a standstill. Snow and ice hamper the country’s traffic. A state of emergency has been called in the southern regions of the country after days of heavy rain and snowstorms led to floods........
A large proportion of Bulgarian households are unable to pay for gas and electricity. According to a Eurostat study published in 2010, some 2.5 million people have difficulty paying for power, water and heat. Gas and electricity prices have risen dramatically in recent years, following the privatisation of public utilities.[Bulgaria's population was about 7.5 million in 2010]
A study published in January 2012 by the KNSB union concluded that only 12 percent of households have more than the bare minimum for existence. The study stated: “The rising cost of basic foodstuffs and fuel all over the world had an impact on the Bulgarian market. Last year there was a gradual increase in the prices of natural gas, electricity, heating and transport and services. This process was exacerbated by the lack of regulation, which has led to an uncontrolled situation in the pricing policies of merchants and middlemen for manufacturers and customers.”
The situation is similar in Romania, which also joined the EU in 2007. The austerity measures and price increases introduced in the country in recent years have had major social repercussions. According to a study by the human rights organisation Samusocial, around 300 people die from cold in the capital Bucharest every year.
Vow to vanquish the venal and virulent vermin vanguarding vice and vouchsafing
the violently vicious and voracious violation of volition! (V For Vendetta)

SHIT SUCKS! MOVE ON! - Allissun

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Post Thu Feb 16, 2012 1:21 am

Re: Hundreds dead in Eastern Europe cold wave

This is very difficult situation and create many problem for people.
This is natural disaster and there is vein of steps if any authority adopted.

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