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Emergency crews on Saturday battled to restore power to more than 1.3 million homes and businesses after Storm Eunice — known as Storm Zeynep in Germany — struck several European countries.
At least 12 people were killed by falling trees, flying debris and high winds in Britain, Ireland, the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany and Poland, emergency services said. Zeynep was the
second major storm to hit Germany in days, where it caused injuries, property damage and killed at least three people. The German Weather Service (DWD) lifted all gale-force wind warnings
for the country on Saturday morning, but warned there could still be high winds. WHERE IN GERMANY DID THE STORM HIT? The strongest winds of 145.8 kilometers per hour (around 90.6 mph) were
measured at the Brocken in the Harz mountains on Friday, according to a spokesperson for the German Weather Service (DWD). Similar high speeds of 143.3 kilometers per hour were measured at
the North Sea coast in Büsum. Other parts of the country, including Feldberg in the Black Forest (137.5) and the Grosser Arber in Bavaria (130.7) also recorded gale-force winds. Two people
died in separate car accidents in the western state of North Rhine-Westphalia, authorities said. Elsewhere in Germany, a man died after falling when trying to repair a damaged roof. The
storm hit northern parts of the country early Saturday. The North Sea German island of Wangerooge lost about 90% of its bathing beach during the night. On the mainland, parts of the states
of Schleswig-Holstein, Hamburg, Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Bremen, Lower Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt, Brandenburg, Berlin, North Rhine-Westphalia, Hesse, Thuringia and Saxony were affected.
Germany's national train operator Deutsche Bahn halted long-distance and regional services in the north of the country until at least Saturday evening. The stoppage of regional services
affected Schleswig-Holstein, Hamburg, Lower Saxony and Bremen, as well as parts of North Rhine-Westphalia. ENGLAND EXPERIENCES 'RECORD GUST' Eunice caused considerable damage and
disruption across southern parts of the British Isles, where at least three people were killed. The storm triggered a rare "red warning," indicating danger of life in some areas,
including London — the first time such an alert has been given for the capital since the warning system was introduced in 2011. The accounting firm PwC on Friday said it estimates the storm
would likely cause insurance losses of as much as 200 to 350 million pounds ($272-$476 million, €240-€420.3 million) in property damage, business and travel disruption in the UK. One death
was reported in Ireland, with a man suffering fatal injuries after being hit by a falling tree while clearing debris from the storm, according to national broadcaster RTE. The island of
Great Britain was badly hit after Eunice made landfall in Cornwall, with widespread damage reported in both England and Wales. More than 200,000 homes were hit by power cuts across southern
England but also in the east in south Wales. In London, the domed roof of the O2 Arena, a prestigious music venue, was severely damaged by high winds. Train services in the south of England
were also disrupted or canceled, and several landings at Heathrow Airport were aborted because of the high winds. The British Coastguard on Friday urged individuals to refrain from heading
to the coast to take selfies in dangerous weather. "A dramatic photograph or selfie is not worth risking your life for, and those who are going to the coast to take pictures are also
putting our teams at risk," Ben Hambling, the coastguard tactical commander said in a statement. Hambling said the coastguard received multiple reports of individuals, some with
children, doing just that. The Met Office said the Isle of Wight registered a gust of 196 km per hour, a provisional record for the strongest ever recorded in England. > Meteorologist
Peter Inness of the University of Reading in England attributed the storms to an unusually strong jet stream over the eastern Atlantic Ocean. Inness said such high-altitude winds could reach
up to nearly 321 kilometers per hour. OTHER PARTS OF EUROPE FACE EXTREME WEATHER The French weather service had issued a severe weather warning for five departments in the north in
anticipation of the arrival of Eunice. Railroads suspended regional traffic in the northernmost Hauts-de-France region and in Normandy from midday on Friday. In the Netherlands, the most
severe level of alert, code red, was called for in large parts of the country, particularly for coastal areas. Rail traffic was also stopped, and schools closed in many areas.
Amsterdam's Schiphol airport announced cancellations and delays, with national carrier KLM canceling almost 170 flights to the air traffic hub because of the storm. In Belgium, high
winds knocked over a construction crane, sending it crashing through the roof of a hospital in the town of Tournai. One man died in the city of Ghent after being hit in the head by a
flyaway solar panel. Poland still had 1.1 million customers without electricity on Saturday afternoon, officials said, after the country's northwest took a battering "I appeal to
you: please stay at home!" Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said in a Facebook post. And in Denmark, strong winds prompted authorities to ban light vehicles from crossing the
Storebaelt tunnel and bridge that links the central island of Funen to Zealand, home to the capital, Copenhagen. A WEEK OF STORMS Zeynep comes on the heels of storm Ylenia, known as Dudley
in international nomenclature, which caused at least three deaths and considerable disruption to transport in some regions of Germany from Wednesday evening into Thursday. Germany gives its
own names to storms and high-pressure systems, with normal citizens able to choose names for such weather events for a fee. see, js, tj, rc, wd/fb (dpa, AFP)