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Three Killed In Hurricane Ophelia In Ireland

Three Killed In Hurricane Ophelia In Ireland

Two men and a woman have been killed as the remnants of Hurricane Ophelia hit the British Isles.

As hurricane-force gusts battered the Republic of Ireland, one woman and a man died in separate incidents when trees fell on their cars.

A second man died in a chainsaw accident while attempting to remove a tree felled by the storm.

Thousands of homes and businesses lost power in Northern Ireland and Wales, along with 360,000 in the Republic.

The power company Northern Ireland Electricity said 15,000 households in the province should prepare to spend Monday night without power.

Police in Scotland say the storm has hit Dumfries and Galloway and it is forecast to continue over the region into the evening.

And in Cumbria, police in Barrow closed roads around Barrow AFC’s stadium after wind damaged its roof.

Cumbria Police said it was dealing with “numerous incidents” related to the high winds, which reached up to 70mph in the area.

The force had received reports of roofs and debris on the roads and overhead cables which had come down and it was urging people to only make essential travel.

In Wales, roads and railway lines have been closed and a gust of 90mph was recorded in Aberdaron, Gwynedd.
The Welsh Ambulance service said a woman has been injured after being hit by a falling branch in Wrexham.

BBC Weather said the strongest winds recorded so far were at Roches Point, near Cork in the Republic of Ireland, where they reached 97mph.

Ireland’s meteorological service said its highest gust was 109mph at Fastnet Rock.
The Met Office’s amber warning for Northern Ireland, western Wales and western parts of Scotland is still in force for wind.

Forecasters are predicting that the far south-west of Scotland will see winds of 80mph on Monday evening, followed by 60mph gusts over Glasgow and the central belt in the early hours of Tuesday morning.

The main danger facing Scottish commuters in the morning would be debris on roads, they said.
Other parts of the UK have seen unseasonably warm temperatures.

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