Storm hits Germany: delayed trains, injured passers-by

Storm
Storms are sweeping across Germany: major train delays, injured passers-by

A storm swept across Germany on Monday and caused property damage in some regions

© Mike Seeboth/dpa

A storm will hit parts of Germany on Monday. Several people are injured by falling trees. Long-distance rail traffic is also being slowed down. The balance.

A storm slowed down the railway’s long-distance traffic on Monday evening, covered roofs and damaged cars as well as power and telephone lines. Several people were hit and injured by falling trees. The storm, with some strong squalls, hit several federal states in the afternoon and evening.

There was a lot to do for numerous fire and police forces – especially in western Germany. Train passengers sometimes had to endure delays of four hours and hope that their temporarily stopped trains would continue at all.

In Bottrop (North Rhine-Westphalia), a 19-year-old pedestrian was injured on her way home from work when a tree suddenly fell onto the sidewalk and hit her. The young woman’s legs were trapped under the tree trunk, the fire department said. Since serious injuries could not be ruled out, a rescue helicopter was requested. In Hattingen in the Ruhr area, a man was injured in a garden by a falling tree.

Due to storm: routes closed, “detour with delay”

In Cologne, a Kölner Verkehrs-betriebe (KVB) bus was damaged by a fallen tree. The driver was taken to hospital with minor injuries, the fire department said. Several fallen trees and broken branches hindered traffic in the cathedral city in the evening.

Deutsche Bahn announced: “Individual routes are closed and there are diversions with delays.” Those affected by the disruption include Hesse, Rhineland-Palatinate, Baden-Württemberg, Bavaria, North Rhine-Westphalia and Lower Saxony. Passengers were still waiting on some ICE trains shortly before midnight, even though they wanted to be at their destination long ago.

Temporarily no traffic in Frankfurt

A look at the arrival board at Frankfurt Central Station around midnight revealed some immense delays: ICE trains from Hamburg were supposed to arrive between 200 and 290 minutes later than planned, a train from Vienna 45 minutes later, an ICE from Berlin 25 minutes later.

In Bavaria, three people in a car suffered serious injuries when an accident occurred due to aquaplaning on the A9 on Monday evening. The car with four occupants overturned in the direction of Munich, the police said. The driver lost control of the car on wet roads. It crashed into the guard rail and then rolled over. The three injured people, all in their 20s, were taken to hospital.

Clothes horse hangs 25 meters high in tree

In Ludwigshafen in the Palatinate, the storm sent a clothes horse flying: according to their own descriptions, the fire department discovered it in a tree 25 meters above the ground. There were around 360 emergency calls and 80 missions in the city as a result of the storm. Among other things, trees fell onto streets and power lines. Loose roof tiles and fallen construction fences also triggered fire brigade operations.

In the Rhine-Neckar area, the police and fire brigade were deployed on a variety of operations. In Hesse, the fire brigades had dozens of operations due to squalls. In Rhineland-Palatinate, the Koblenz police headquarters reported ten cars in its region that had been damaged by falling trees or other objects. Power and telephone lines were also damaged by falling trees. “The interruptions were only short-lived,” said Koblenz.

Deutsche Bahn’s long-distance traffic is now mostly back to normal after major disruptions caused by storms. A railway spokesman said there were only major delays between Nuremberg and Erfurt. Delays of around 75 minutes can be expected there. “Otherwise, most of the storm-related disruptions were remedied during the night and rail traffic is running stable in the morning,” said the spokesman when asked by the German Press Agency.

dpa

source site-1