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PARIS — Snow, ice and high winds brought transport chaos to swathes of Europe for a third day on Wednesday, with hundreds of flights cancelled and passengers stranded.
Airports in Paris and Amsterdam were the worst affected, with the Dutch authorities saying more than 1,000 travellers had been forced to spend the night at Schiphol, one of Europe's busiest hubs.
Six people have died in weather-related accidents as the continent reels from the most bitter cold snap of the winter so far.
Five of those deaths were confirmed in France on Tuesday, while a woman died in Bosnia as heavy snow and rain sparked floods and power outages across the Balkans.
For those without homes sleeping on the streets, the cold snap has come as a huge shock.
Boubacar Camara, from Guinea, told AFP he had "no choice but to keep on going".
"You just have to stay strong, make sure you don't die, you know," said the 19-year-old, who is sleeping in a tent in the French capital.
"We can't do anything about the cold, I'm not used to this at all."
Black ice warning
More than 100 flights were cancelled on Wednesday at Paris Charles de Gaulle airport and 40 more at the French capital's other main hub, Orly.
Transport Minister Philippe Tabarot told local TV he was "hoping the situation returns to normal this afternoon".
All public bus services in Paris and the surrounding suburbs were also suspended because of icy roads, with almost half of the country's mainland on alert for heavy snow and black ice.
A skier skies past the Eiffel Tower at the Champ de Mars covered in snow, following snowfalls in Paris, on January 7, 2026. (AFP)

A skier jumps down a snow-covered slope next to spectating pedestrians at Montmartre following snowfalls in Paris, on January 7, 2026. (AFP)