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Travel is disrupted by a chilly cold snap that grips large parts of Europe

Five people died on French roads after being struck by freezing weather on Tuesday. Snow and ice conditions forced the cancellation of hundreds flights in the Netherlands.

A computer outage caused a disruption to the entire rail network in the Netherlands. All services were suspended on Tuesday morning. After 0900 GMT trains began to run in some parts of the Netherlands, but there were still problems in the area around Amsterdam.

The high-speed Eurostar service to Paris from Amsterdam was either cancelled or delayed. Over?400 flights have been cancelled at Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport, the majority of which were by Air France-KLM's Dutch unit. The winter weather has crippled the traffic for the fifth day in a row.

Javier Sepulveda, a Spaniard, was stuck in Schiphol for the third day trying to return to his home country of Norway. He claimed that he began queuing up at the KLM Help Desk at 6:30 am on Tuesday, and six hours later was still nowhere near the front of the queue.

The 39-year old said, "I can only call the situation chaotic and insane."

Snow falls over large parts of Germany and France

Temperatures in Germany fell below minus 10° Celsius (14° Fahrenheit) early Tuesday morning, especially in the east and south.

The country was covered with snow in large areas, especially the regions near the North Sea where snowfall is becoming increasingly rare. Meteorologists predicted a storm that would hit the country Friday. Heavy snowfall was expected in the east and north.

A prolonged cold snap in France saw temperatures drop to freezing overnight, after Monday's snowfall across large parts of France and the Paris region. Six small airports in the north and west of France were closed, but there were no expected cancellations at Paris' main airports.

Transport Minister Philippe Tabarot has urged people to "travel as little on the road as possible and work from home", warning that thawed out snow, which then re-froze over night can create dangerous "road conditions".

BFMTV, among other French media, reported that five people were killed in road accidents since Monday due to the freezing temperatures. BFMTV and other French media reported that the bus service in Paris was chaotic as it resumed after Monday's suspension.

SARAJEVO WOMAN CRUSHED BY A SNOW-LADEN TREE

Meteorological Office in the UK said on Monday that winter weather hazards may continue for the remainder of the week throughout most of the UK. The Meteorological Office issued an amber alert, the second most severe warning after red, for snow in central Scotland.

This week, heavy snow and rain also caused havoc in the Western Balkans, closing roads and cutting off power, and flooding rivers. On Monday, a woman in Sarajevo, the Bosnian capital died after a wet tree covered with snow fell onto her. Reporting by Bart Meijer, Louise Rasmussen, Thomas Seythal, and Daria SitoSucic, in Sarajevo. Editing by Michael Perry. Richard Lough. Alexandra Hudson.

(source: Reuters)