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World / Europe

Rare snow storm disrupts flights, shuts down schools in Rome

Published: 26 Feb 2018 - 12:42 pm | Last Updated: 06 Nov 2021 - 10:06 am
Tourists visit the Arch of Constantine during a snowfall in Rome on February 26, 2018. AFP / Vincenzo Pinto

Tourists visit the Arch of Constantine during a snowfall in Rome on February 26, 2018. AFP / Vincenzo Pinto

By Philip Pullella | Reuters

Rome: A rare snow storm in Rome on Monday disrupted transport, shut down schools and prompted the authorities to call in the army to help clear the streets.

Only one runway was operating at Rome's main airport, Fiumicino. The Italian capital's second airport, Ciampino, was closed overnight and workers were clearing a runway to allow it to reopen on Monday morning.

Italian aviation officials said Ryanair, which uses Ciampino as it Italian hub, had decided to cancel all flights to and from the airport. But they said most of Italy's other main airports were open despite delays to some flights.

It was the heaviest snowfall in Rome in six years and the largest for the end of February in decades. The city, which is not equipped to deal with snow emergencies due to their rarity, asked other areas to send in snow ploughs to help clear roads.

Tourists take pictures of the ancient Colosseum during a snowfall in Rome on February 26, 2018. / AFP / Vincenzo Pinto

 

Schools were ordered closed in the Italian capital, where many people could not reach their places of work. Police asked residents to stay at home if possible.

Piazza Venezia, Rome's central square which is usually a cacophony of car horns and a tangle of traffic, was eerily empty, quiet and white as dawn broke.

In St. Peter's Square in the Vatican priests and seminarians threw snowballs at each other.