Six dead and hundreds of flights cancelled as snow causes chaos across Europe

In France, three people died in two separate incidents in Landes, in the south-west, due to black ice, authorities said.
Two more died in separate motor accidents in the Paris region. One was the result of a collision between a driver and a heavy goods vehicle in east Paris, police said.
The other was killed after a taxi driver hit a kerb due to snow and plunged into the Marne river, the outlet said.
The Balkans has also seen snow and heavy rain. A woman died in the Bosnian capital Sarajevo on Monday after a tree weighed down with wet snow fell on her, police said.
French Transport Minister Philippe Tabarot said more snow was expected in the country on Tuesday night and Wednesday. He called on people to travel as little as possible on the roads and to work from home.
France’s national weather service said 38 districts would be placed on orange alert for snow and black ice on Wednesday. Many train services were cancelled in parts of the country.
In France’s capital, authorities said Roissy-Charles de Gaulle airport would see 40% of its flights cancelled for several hours on Wednesday morning, so that staff could clear snow from the runways. The capital’s Orly airport planned to cancel a quarter of its flights during the same time period.
More than 400 flights were cancelled at Amsterdam’s Schiphol airport on Wednesday, causing widespread disruption to travel plans.
Hundreds of passengers were stranded, with many unable to join connecting flights. Long queues formed at airline counters as people waited for information about when flights would resume.




