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Hundreds Of Thousands Left In Dark, Cold As Massive Storms Hit Southeastern Europe

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Heavy snowstorms in Moldova have severely disrupted traffic in the country.
Heavy snowstorms in Moldova have severely disrupted traffic in the country.

Blizzards, snowfall, and high winds have wreaked havoc over the past two days in eastern and southeastern Europe, leaving hundreds of thousands of people isolated and without electricity and running water, while traffic accidents prompted by the dangerous conditions have caused at least two deaths and several injuries.

A powerful cyclone sweeping from the Black Sea brought snowfall as far north as Moscow in what the Hydrometeorological Center of Russia called “one of the strongest storms to ever hit at the end of November.”

Ukraine, Moldova, Bulgaria, and Romania were among the hardest hit areas, including the Russia-annexed Crimea peninsula where one person died and almost half a million people were left without power after the storm in the Black Sea region flooded roads, unrooted trees and downed electricity lines.

The Aquarium Museum in the Russia-annexed city of Sevastopol reported that the storm tore through the complex, killing all of the 800 or so animals housed in the facility.

A storm warning remains in effect in Crimea due to wind gusts of up to 40 meters per second and November 27 was declared a day off, the Interfax news agency reported.

Severe Storms Lead To Flooding And Evacuations In Crimea

Local residents are helped out of a truck by rescuers during an emergency evacuation from a flooded street in the Crimean city of Yevpatoria on November 26.<br />
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A Russian-installed official in the region that Moscow annexed from Ukraine in 2014, Oleg Kryuchkov, said one person had been killed.<br />
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1/12 Local residents are helped out of a truck by rescuers during an emergency evacuation from a flooded street in the Crimean city of Yevpatoria on November 26.

A Russian-installed official in the region that Moscow annexed from Ukraine in 2014, Oleg Kryuchkov, said one person had been killed.



 
A Russian-installed official in Ukraine's Crimea peninsula said that one person had been killed and others injured as severe storms left more than half a million people without electricity and heat in the region that Moscow illegally annexed in 2014.
Rescuers take part in an emergency evacuation of local residents in Yevpatoria during the heavy rains.<br />
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&quot;There is one fatality, according to preliminary information. It happened in the village of Morske, near Sudak. A man went to watch the waves and, unfortunately, died a tragic death,&quot; Kryuchkov said in a live program on the Russian state-run TV channel Rossia-24.
2/12 Rescuers take part in an emergency evacuation of local residents in Yevpatoria during the heavy rains.

"There is one fatality, according to preliminary information. It happened in the village of Morske, near Sudak. A man went to watch the waves and, unfortunately, died a tragic death," Kryuchkov said in a live program on the Russian state-run TV channel Rossia-24.
A Russian-installed official in Ukraine's Crimea peninsula said that one person had been killed and others injured as severe storms left more than half a million people without electricity and heat in the region that Moscow illegally annexed in 2014.
Residents are helped out of an evacuation truck during a heavy rainstorm.<br />
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Kryuchkov added that&nbsp;nearly half a million people were without power and heat on the peninsula.<br />
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3/12 Residents are helped out of an evacuation truck during a heavy rainstorm.

Kryuchkov added that nearly half a million people were without power and heat on the peninsula.

 
A Russian-installed official in Ukraine's Crimea peninsula said that one person had been killed and others injured as severe storms left more than half a million people without electricity and heat in the region that Moscow illegally annexed in 2014.
Rescuers use a boat while evacuating residents from a flooded street in Yevpatoria.
4/12 Rescuers use a boat while evacuating residents from a flooded street in Yevpatoria.
A Russian-installed official in Ukraine's Crimea peninsula said that one person had been killed and others injured as severe storms left more than half a million people without electricity and heat in the region that Moscow illegally annexed in 2014.
Rescuers assist those whose homes were flooded.
5/12 Rescuers assist those whose homes were flooded.
A Russian-installed official in Ukraine's Crimea peninsula said that one person had been killed and others injured as severe storms left more than half a million people without electricity and heat in the region that Moscow illegally annexed in 2014.
A man and a dog are rescued from the flooding in Yevpatoria.
6/12 A man and a dog are rescued from the flooding in Yevpatoria.
A Russian-installed official in Ukraine's Crimea peninsula said that one person had been killed and others injured as severe storms left more than half a million people without electricity and heat in the region that Moscow illegally annexed in 2014.
A woman reacts during the emergency evacuation.
7/12 A woman reacts during the emergency evacuation.
A Russian-installed official in Ukraine's Crimea peninsula said that one person had been killed and others injured as severe storms left more than half a million people without electricity and heat in the region that Moscow illegally annexed in 2014.
Evacuations continued late into the early morning on November 26.
8/12 Evacuations continued late into the early morning on November 26.
A Russian-installed official in Ukraine's Crimea peninsula said that one person had been killed and others injured as severe storms left more than half a million people without electricity and heat in the region that Moscow illegally annexed in 2014.
A resident walks amid the aftermath of flooding in Crimea&#39;s capital, Simferopol, on November 27.
9/12 A resident walks amid the aftermath of flooding in Crimea's capital, Simferopol, on November 27.
A Russian-installed official in Ukraine's Crimea peninsula said that one person had been killed and others injured as severe storms left more than half a million people without electricity and heat in the region that Moscow illegally annexed in 2014.
A fallen tree blocks the sidewalk in front of a residential building in Simferopol.<br />
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10/12 A fallen tree blocks the sidewalk in front of a residential building in Simferopol.

 
A Russian-installed official in Ukraine's Crimea peninsula said that one person had been killed and others injured as severe storms left more than half a million people without electricity and heat in the region that Moscow illegally annexed in 2014.
A man carries a cage with a parrot while walking along a flooded street following a storm in Yevpatoria.
11/12 A man carries a cage with a parrot while walking along a flooded street following a storm in Yevpatoria.
A Russian-installed official in Ukraine's Crimea peninsula said that one person had been killed and others injured as severe storms left more than half a million people without electricity and heat in the region that Moscow illegally annexed in 2014.
Russian-installed authorities on the Crimean Peninsula said that November 27 would be declared a nonworking day to allow residents and authorities to clean up after the weekend storms.
12/12 Russian-installed authorities on the Crimean Peninsula said that November 27 would be declared a nonworking day to allow residents and authorities to clean up after the weekend storms.
A Russian-installed official in Ukraine's Crimea peninsula said that one person had been killed and others injured as severe storms left more than half a million people without electricity and heat in the region that Moscow illegally annexed in 2014.
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In war-wracked Ukraine, inclement weather added to people's hardships caused by Russian strikes on the country's energy infrastructure.

Heavy snowfall across the whole country prompted the closure of 14 highways while 16 of Ukraine's 24 regions were experiencing power cuts. Especially harsh conditions were reported in the southern regions of Odesa and Mykolayiv, where snow drifts as high as two meters hampered traffic.

The Ukrainian Interior Ministry said a total of 2,019 settlements in 16 regions have been left without electricity, while 1,370 trucks remain stranded, and 840 cars had to be towed.

Authorities in Romania and neighboring Moldova said hundreds of cities and villages have been left without electricity and water in the two neighboring countries following heavy snowfall and blizzards that prompted a severe disruption of road and railway traffic.

Railway traffic has resumed in southeastern Romania but 21 national highways remain closed as of November 27, authorities said, while schools in five southeastern counties -- Braila, Galati, Tulcea, Calarasi, and Constanta were also closed.

A total of 22 counties out of 41 and 170 villages and cities in the southeast of the country, including Bucharest, were affected by power cuts.

In Moldova, 123,000 people from almost 200 localities were left without electricity. One man died when his car veered off the snow-covered road and hit a tree on November 26, police said, adding that several other traffic accidents had been reported.

Sixteen Moldovans were injured when the bus they were traveling on overturned during a blizzard on a highway in southern Romania, police said. Emergency services transported several injured people to the hospital.

In Bulgaria, snowfall and blizzards prompted authorities to declare a state of emergency in several areas in the northeast of the country -- in the Silistra and Razgrad regions, the Valchi dol municipality, the Varna region, and the Shumen region.

Some 1,000 settlements were without electricity, Prime Minister Nikolay Denkov said at an emergency government meeting on November 26.

With reporting by RFE/RL's Russian Service, Digi24.ro, hotnews.ro, unimedia.md, and AP
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