Ice storm shuts Paris airports
Source: AFP
PARIS
-- High winds lashed France on Tuesday, prompting authorities
to shut Paris' two international airports for the first time
in 34 years.
Winds gusting at up to 130 kilometres (80 miles) per hour were
recorded on France's Atlantic coast late on Monday, with forecasters
saying they could reach up to 160 kilometres per hour.
With gusts of up to 100 kilometres per hour expected to hit
the Paris region, the authorities closed Paris' airports from
8pm on Monday until 10am (5pm Singapore time) on Tuesday.
All flights to and from the city's two main airports, Charles
de Gaulle (Roissy) and Orly, have been cancelled within that
time period and travellers were asked not to head to either
of them.
Charles de Gaulle is one of the busiest airports in Europe.
'It's annoying because I work tomorrow, but it's for security
reasons,' said Jean-Pierre Niros, 57, an Air France passenger
at Charles de Gaulle who was supposed to return to the southern
city of Nice on Monday.
Air France said it had reserved 2,000 hotel rooms near Charles
de Gaulle for passengers, but airport authorities said some
100 passengers were spending the night in transit lounges.
Regional airports in Nantes, Brest and Rennes remained opened,
although several flights were cancelled.
The storm comes just two weeks after another that left 11 dead
in the southwest.
The long Atlantic coast was expected to be worst hit, with heavy
rain and powerful winds, but the entire west and north of the
country was in the storm's path, weather forecasters said.
Ferries between Brittany and nearby islands were suspended,
operators Oceane and Penn Ar Bedd said, while Brittany Ferries
postponed the inaugural sailing Tuesday of its service from
Roscoff to Plymouth in southern Britain.
Dispatchers in coastal regions said late Monday that emergency
services had received numerous calls for fallen trees and several
for roof damage, but that the situation was calm.
School bus services were cancelled in some regions over fears
of fallen trees, and truck traffic was prohibited near Bordeaux
due to the wind.
The French navy has put three rescue vessels on standby to sail
to the aid of any shipping in difficulty in the mouth of the
Channel, while sandbags have been deployed on sea-fronts exposed
to potential flooding.
Air France said it expected serious delays on Tuesday when operations
resume at Charles de Gaulle and Orly airports, but that if the
weather forecasts were accurate it would be able to make all
scheduled long-haul flights after 10:00 am except for one to
New York and one to Beirut.



