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Heavy snowstorm causes travel chaos in Istanbul
by Staff Writers
Istanbul (AFP) Feb 18, 2015


A heavy fall of snow on Wednesday caused travel chaos in Istanbul, forcing the temporary closure of Turkey's main airport and causing hundreds of traffic accidents.

Istanbulites woke up to find the famed minarets and domes of the historic city's skyline layered in snow after a heavy fall overnight that has still shown no sign of abating.

National carrier Turkish Airlines was forced to delay or cancel hundreds of flights from Ataturk International Airport, the country's main hub, as well as from Sabiha Gokcen airport on the Asian side of the city.

The authorities shut down Ataturk airport for over two hours due to poor visibility and to clear the runway of snow and ice. But the airport has now reopened, albeit with heavy delays.

Earlier, a Turkish Airlines flight from Beirut skidded off the runway due to ice but none of the passengers were hurt, Turkish media reports said.

The weather also affected Super Lig Turkish football side Besiktas who were stuck Istanbul waiting for the weather to clear for a charter flight to Liverpool for their crunch Europa League clash on Merseyside on Thursday.

The snowstorm also closed the shipping channel through the Bosphorus Strait, one of the busiest in the world and forced the cancellation of most inter-city ferry services.

The Istanbul municipality said there had been over 840 traffic accidents on Tuesday alone due to the snowstorm and on Wednesday ordered that only vehicles with snow chains could take to the streets.


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WHITE OUT
Snow, ice, cold: Winter piles on in eastern US
Washington (AFP) Feb 17, 2015
Heavy snowfall and glacial temperatures shut down much of the central and eastern United States Tuesday - including the US government - in a new bout of bad weather in this winter of bone-chilling discontent. News reports said four people died - three in Tennessee and one in Kansas - amid treacherous driving conditions overnight, with blowing snow hampering visibility and roads slippery ... read more


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