Thousands without power in UK storms

These waves have destroyed the railway platform at Dawlish as yet another Atlantic storm battered Britain after the wettest January on record
These waves have destroyed the railway platform at Dawlish as yet another Atlantic storm battered Britain after the wettest January on record
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BBC Online :
There is further flooding while power supplies and transport are disrupted after south-west England and south Wales were hit by a powerful storm.
Engineers have been working to restore power but more than 7,000 homes are still without electricity.
In Dawlish, Devon, a section of sea wall under the railway line collapsed, leaving the track suspended in mid-air.
David Cameron will chair a meeting of the Cobra emergency committee later to consider the government’s response.
It is the first time this year that the prime minister will have chaired a meeting of Cobra to discuss the floods and follows widespread criticism of Environment Secretary Owen Paterson’s handling of the crisis.
The prime minister’s office said Cameron was anxious to ensure that “all that can be done is being done”.
Earlier, First Great Western said all lines between Exeter St Davids and Penzance were closed because of adverse weather conditions and it advised against travel for the rest of the day.
Part of the sea wall at Dawlish, which is between Exeter and Cornwall, has collapsed and the railway station and tracks have been severely damaged by huge waves, driven by gale-force winds.
The Environment Agency has nine severe flood warnings in place, meaning “danger to life”, covering much of the south coast from Cornwall to Dorset and two areas of Somerset.

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