Train services resume after storm batters Europe

High-speed train services resumed Wednesday between Paris and London and between Paris and Brussels, the French rail authorities said, after a severe late-winter snowstorm battered northwestern Europe, causing widespread travel chaos with the cancellation of hundreds of flights at main airports. SNCF said the Eurostar service to London and the Thalys service to Brussels had resumed around 0700 am (0600 GMT). Links were also restored between Paris and regional centres like Amien, Rouen and Caen. Tuesday's blizzard-like conditions -- coming only eight days before the official start of spring -- also knocked out power to thousands of people in France and left thousands of motorists stranded in their cars. France was the worst affected but Belgium, Britain, Germany and the Netherlands also reported major disruptions. Frankfurt Airport, Europe's third-busiest hub, re-opened two runways by late Tuesday after being briefly forced to completely close due to the heavy snow. An airport spokesman said 700 flights had been cancelled out of a scheduled daily total of 1,250 and warned of more cancellations and delays on Wednesday. Paris's two main airports, Charles de Gaulle and Orly, said they had cancelled up to a quarter of flights and the nearby Beauvais airport, serving mainly low-cost airlines, cancelled all flights. Eurostar trains between London and Paris, the Thalys line between Paris and Brussels and all other high-speed train lines in northern France were suspended Tuesday. In statements on their websites, Eurostar said it would "operate an amended timetable" on Wednesday, while Thalys said travellers should expect "disturbances". Two northwestern French regions, Calvados and Manche, were put under a "red alert" urging residents to stay indoors -- the first time such an alert was activated because of snow. It was finally lifted Tuesday evening. However an "orange" alert was maintained in 21 other regions. Road conditions in the Paris area also remained difficult as temperatures should plunge to around minus six degrees (around 20 Fahrenheit) overnight with more snow expected. The interior ministry put out a travel advisory for the northern third of the country, saying non-essential travels should be postponed. Weather service Meteo France described the snowfall as "remarkable for the season" and warned that alerts would probably remain in place until at least Wednesday. More than 2,000 people were stranded in their cars overnight as heavy snow paralysed roads in Normandy and Brittany, with many spending the night in emergency shelters. About 80,000 homes in the north and northwest of France were without power, following snowfalls of up to 30 centimetres (12 inches) and winds creating metre-high snowdrifts. Schools in some northern regions were closed. A traffic accident near Lille injured 14 people and a 58-year-old homeless man was found dead, presumably from the cold, outside a building in the town of Saint-Brieuc in Brittany. Another death from the cold was also reported in Normandy. At London's St Pancras International train station, hundreds of passengers queued in weary resignation to change their tickets after seeing the day's trains cancelled, hopeful but far from guaranteed of a seat on a Wednesday service. Francoise Rolland, 65, had to return to family she was staying with in Oxford after her train to Paris was cancelled -- her first time using the Eurostar, and her first visit to Britain. "We don't know if we can go home tomorrow. It's annoying, but what can you do? We are not going to swim across the Channel." Another stranded passenger, 28-year-old Tom Moens of Belgium, said he was concerned about missing work but conceded things could be worse. "It's not their fault, Of course we want to go home, but (London) is not a bad place to be stuck," he said. The RAC warned of a "nightmare weather scenario" on Wednesday as the icy front which caused chaos in parts of southern Britain made its way northwards. The Met Office issued yellow warnings for snow in parts of Scotland, the north-east of England, Yorkshire and Humber and the East Midlands. John Hammond, BBC weather forecaster, said: "The most severe weather -- the worst of the bitter cold and the snow across the South East -- is over. "The main focus for the next 24 hours is eastern Scotland and north-east England. Here, we could see a few centimetres of snow overnight." Hundreds of people around Britain were also stranded in their cars overnight, some for more than 10 hours as ice, snow and powerful winds descended on southeastern England. Police, rescue services, snow ploughs and gritting lorries battled to help the motorists in temperatures as low as minus 3 degrees Celsius (26 degrees Fahrenheit), with some areas under 10 centimetres (four inches) of snow. Singer Cheryl Baker, formerly of the band Bucks Fizz which won the 1981 Eurovision with the song "Making Your Mind Up", was among those caught up in the chaos as she tried to reach Brighton to pick up her children. "We (took) 10 hours to do a one-hour journey," she told ITV. "The traffic and the weather have just been atrocious and none of the roads had been gritted." Public transport in Berlin was affected with several regional trains cancelled or delayed. There were also a spate of crashes on icy German roads with several people seriously hurt and one death, according to police. A mass pile-up in the central German state of Hesse involving at least 100 vehicles injured several dozen. The crash was apparently caused by heavy snowfall and icy roads. In Belgium, the snowstorms caused massive traffic disruptions, with vehicles backed up on 1,600 kilometres (1,000 miles) of freeways Tuesday morning due to snowdrifts and ice.