7 Jan 2026

Six dead in weather accidents as cold snap grips Europe

6:52 am on 7 January 2026

By AFP

Pedestrians walk through the snow-blanketed gardens of Versailles outside Paris on January 6, 2026. Some of the winter's coldest weather so far hit travel in Britain, France and the Netherlands on January 5, closing roads, grounding flights and forcing train cancellations, including on Eurostar, just days after a power outage caused major disruption. (Photo by GEOFFROY VAN DER HASSELT / AFP)

Pedestrians walk through the snow-blanketed gardens of Versailles outside Paris on January 6, 2026. Photo: GEOFFROY VAN DER HASSELT

Icy temperatures plunged swathes of Europe into a second day of travel chaos, with weather-related accidents causing six deaths from the continent's bitterest cold snap this winter so far.

Five of those deaths since the mercury dropped on Monday (Paris Time) were in France alone, while a woman died in Bosnia as heavy snow and rain sparked floods and power outages across the Balkans.

Paris's two main airports, Roissy-Charles de Gaulle and Orly, were to cancel many flights early Wednesday (Paris Time) to allow ground crews to clear snow from runways and de-ice planes.

At Charles de Gaulle, 40 percent of flights were to be scrapped, and 25 percent at Orly.

In Britain, temperatures plunged to -12.5C overnight Monday-Tuesday (Paris Time) in Norfolk, eastern England, while temperatures below -10C across the Netherlands brought trains to a standstill on Tuesday morning.

A photograph taken on January 6, 2026 shows railway lines covered in snow at Arnhem Central Station, as train service is resuming after an IT outage at the Dutch national railway service Nederlandse Spoorwegen (NS). (Photo by Robin van Lonkhuijsen / ANP / AFP) / Netherlands OUT / NETHERLANDS OUT / NETHERLANDS OUT

A photograph taken on January 6, 2026 shows railway lines covered in snow at Arnhem Central Station, as train service is resuming after an IT outage at the Dutch national railway service Nederlandse Spoorwegen (NS). Photo: ROBIN VAN LONKHUIJSEN

"Last night was the coldest night of the winter so far," Britain's Met Office said, with nearly all of the United Kingdom on alert for snow and ice and more snowfall expected.

With the chill making roads perilous, three people died in accidents linked to black ice in southwestern France on Monday morning (Paris Time), authorities said, while a taxi driver died in hospital on Monday night (Paris Time) after veering into the Marne river in the Paris region.

His passenger was still being treated for hypothermia, according to a police source. Another driver also lost his life east of Paris on Monday (Paris Time) after a collision with a heavy goods vehicle.

Meanwhile Amsterdam's Schiphol airport, the Netherlands' main flight hub, saw a second day of weather-driven cancellations Tuesday (Paris Time), with at least 600 flights grounded and travellers facing huge queues at the airline counters.

Dutch airline KLM, which is responsible for removing ice from most aircraft at Schiphol, warned that it had nearly run out of de-icing fluid, blaming the "extreme" weather conditions and supply delays.

Trains from the Dutch national railway operator NS only began rolling again after 10:00am (0900 GMT), with services limited afterwards.

But planes got off the ground again from Liverpool in northwest England and Aberdeen in northeast Scotland, after the cold had forced both airports to close on Monday (Paris Time).

This photograph taken on January 6, 2026 shows damaged vehicles at the site of a collision between two buses on the A63 near Saint-Geours-de-Maremne, southwestern France. Three people died in two accidents linked to black ice on the morning on January 6, 2026 in the Landes, including two in a collision involving two buses and numerous vehicles on the A63 motorway, according to the Landes prefecture, which reports four injured (two in critical condition and two in serious but stable condition). (Photo by Gaizka IROZ / AFP)

Three people died in two accidents linked to black ice on the morning on January 6, 2026 in the Landes, France. Photo: GAIZKA IROZ

'Like climbing Mont Blanc'

After nearly 40 centimetres (16 inches) fell in the Bosnian capital Sarajevo at the weekend, a woman died in hospital after being hit by a tree that collapsed under the weight of the snow on Monday (Paris Time), according to the police.

Dozens of villages across neighbouring Serbia were left without power in the wake of the snowfall, while downpours caused several rivers to overflow in Bosnia and forced the evacuation of dozens of homes in Albania.

More than 300 schools were shut in Scotland Tuesday (Paris Time), the national BBC broadcaster reported, with Scottish train services also severely disrupted.

"Tuesday will bring more severe snow and ice to the north of Scotland - and with it, continued travel disruption and risks to people and communities," Scottish transport minister Fiona Hyslop warned late on Monday (Paris Time).

"It's important that people plan ahead, consider their travel plans and work from home if that's an option."

Several smaller French airports were closed on Tuesday (Paris Time), according to the transport ministry.

In the French capital, Monday's snowfall had settled overnight across much of Paris's pavements, with pedestrians forced to navigate treacherously icy streets.

Tour guide Valeria Pitchouguina said the sight of Paris snowed under was "truly extraordinary", but the ice was complicating efforts to shepherd her groups up the steep steps to the picture-postcard district of Montmartre.

"When it's like that and snowy and icy, it's something else, it's less like climbing Montmartre and more like climbing Mont Blanc," Pitchouguina told AFPTV.

Hungary meanwhile also braced for a second day of fresh snowfall Tuesday (Paris Time), with some roads and railways already impassable, especially in the northeast.

Construction and Transport Minister Janos Lazar urged Hungarians to only head out "if absolutely necessary".

- AFP