Snowstorm ‘Huda’ and flooding lash the Middle East | Page 2 | World Defense

Snowstorm ‘Huda’ and flooding lash the Middle East

Kamarsun1

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A man pulls a heater along a street during snow fall in the besieged town of Arbeen in the eastern Ghouta of Damascus Jan. 7, 2015. (Reuters)


By Staff writer | Al Arabiya News
Wednesday, 7 January 2015

Unusually powerful winter storms and torrential rain have swept through the Middle East and North Africa region, forcing the closure of access routes and highways and sparking flooding and traffic chaos across the region.

Dubbed “Huda” or “Zina,” the wintry weather has disrupted everyday life in the region, but particularly caused an even deeper humanitarian crisis for Syrian refugees scattered across the neighboring countries.

Lebanon

The storm dumped rain and hail on Lebanon's coast and heavy snows in the mountains and central Bekaa Valley, where gas stations, banks, schools and most shops closed.

On Tuesday, air traffic was halted at 7:00 pm (1500 GMT) as Beirut buffeted by heavy winds. Flights resumed about an hour later, according to the National News Agency.

While the storm disrupted life for everyone, it proved particularly trying for the hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees who live in tents and makeshift shelters in the Bekaa.

Near the town of Anjar, men used brooms and sticks to try to clear the heavy snow from the tops of refugee tents, fearing the weight might cause the shelters to collapse. Inside the tents, adults could be seen huddling around the wood burning stoves to try to keep warm.

Jordan

The education ministry ordered all schools to stay closed Wednesday but left it up to authorities at the country's universities to decide whether to open.

Similarily, Jordanian civil servants and ministries were given a day off on Wednesday, while official exams this week are being postponed.

Syria

In Syria, snow blanketed Qassioun Mountain, which overlooks Damascus. The snowfall also brought traffic to a near standstill in the capital, Damascus, and prompted the Education Ministry to shutter school and universities for two days.

Late on Tuesday, Syria's state news agency SANA reported that the country's two main ports in Tartous and Latakia had been closed as winds of up to 74 kilometers per hour (45 miles per hour) caused waves more than 5 meters (15 feet) high.

Palestine

Snow accumulated in the Golan Heights and northern Israel. Schools across Jerusalem closed ahead of a forecast warning of 10 inches (25 centimeters) of snowfall.

Palestinian authorities in the West Bank and Gaza Strip declared a state of emergency over the storm. An 8-month-old Palestinian infant in the Tulkarem refugee camp was killed in a fire caused by a heating stove, Palestinian civil defense ministry spokesman Loae Bani Odeh said.

On Tuesday, Palestinians and Israelis scurried for food supplies and gas or paraffin heaters. In the Palestinian city of Ramallah, shoppers cleared bread, water and diapers off supermarket shelves.

"We ran out quickly," said one salesman in Jerusalem's Mahane Yehuda market, "There's not a heater to be found anywhere in the area."

Heavy rains and near-freezing temperatures in the storm threatens to deepen the misery in the Gaza Strip, where streets are still strewn with wreckage from a 50-day war with Israel last summer, thousands live in U.N. shelters and damaged homes and the power is on only six hours a day.

"No electricity, no drinkable water, no reconstruction, and now a storm. Our people need the help of the entire world," said Samir Ali, 47, a Gaza city taxi driver.

Egypt

Five of Egypt’s Red Sea ports have been closed off for the second day in a row due to high wind speeds of more than 25 notches, and more than four meters high waves in the Gulf of Suez.

Heavy rain coupled with frost, thunder and lightning, have affected traffic and emptied the streets of Alexandria and other parts of the northwestern coast.

On Tuesday afternoon, a sandstorm engulfed Egypt's capital Cairo, blocking out the sun as rush-hour traffic began.

Saudi Arabia

On Tuesday, Saudi meteorologists predicted temperatures in the north and northwestern parts of the kingdom to go below zero, in addition to high speed winds causing a sandstorm. The Presidency of Meteorology and Environmental Protection (PME) also predicted snow to hit Tabuk, Turaif and al-Jouf.
http://english.alarabiya.net/en/New...m-Huda-and-flooding-hit-the-Middle-East-.html
Snow is not usual in the middle east for sure, but snow has fallen before, but I don't think it was this bad. This is a true sign of the times. That or maybe HAARP is responsible.
 

ProShell

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On the one hand, I'm floored by all of the snow. It looks like the populace is unprepared, and everyone is running around shocked.

But on the other hand, I don't feel much sympathy, since they are getting a taste of what life is like for all of us here in the North.

Those tanks pushing snow around are pretty epic if you ask me.
 
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