Death toll from Europe cold spell hits 52

An aerial view of the snow-laden church Jenisberg, near Davos, Switzerland. (AP Photo/KeystoneArno Balzarini)

An aerial view of the snow-laden church Jenisberg, near Davos, Switzerland. (AP Photo/KeystoneArno Balzarini)

Published Jan 31, 2012

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Thirty people, most of them homeless, have died of hypothermia in recent days in Ukraine, part of a surge of deaths across eastern Europe as the region grapples with an unusually severe cold spell.

In all, at least 54 people have died from the cold in Europe over the last week.

Of the victims in Ukraine, 21 were found frozen on the streets, five died in hospitals and four died in their own homes, said Emergency Situations Ministry spokeswoman Yulia Yershova.

Temperatures plunged to minus 23 C (minus 10 F) in the capital of Kiev and elsewhere in Ukraine, as schools and nurseries closed down and authorities set up hundreds of heated tents with hot tea and sandwiches for the homeless.

Kiev city administration head Oleksandr Popov ordered city schools and colleges closed beginning Wednesday through the end of the week, as temperatures are expected to drop to minus 28 C (minus 18 F).

“They will be on a break at least until Monday,” Popov said on his website.

In Poland, five people died of hypothermia in the last 24 hours, bringing the death toll from the cold to 15 in the last four days, the national police said.

Temperatures sunk Tuesday to minus 27 C (minus 17 F) in the southeastern Polish city of Ustrzyki Gorne – and forecasts predicted minus 29 C (minus 20 F) in the region overnight.

In Russia, one person died late Monday of the cold in Moscow, where temperatures fell to minus 21 C, the city's health department said. The Russian Emergencies Ministry is not reporting deaths across the country yet. – Sapa-AP

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