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Normandy storm havoc strands trains and cuts power
Storms and strong winds have caused havoc in Normandy as 1,500 train passengers were left stranded overnight and 700 homes are without power today, due to fallen trees, strong winds, and flash flooding.

No-one has been seriously injured due to the adverse weather, but severe delays affected SNCF train services last night (Tuesday August 7 to Wednesday August 8) especially on the Paris-Caen-Cherbourg line.
Violent thunder and lightning in the Eure and Seine-Maritime areas especially caused trees to fall and block tracks, 700 people being stranded in Lisieux, 500 people in Évreux, and 300 in Caen.
À cause des , près de 1.500 voyageurs se sont retrouvés bloqués dans les gares de , et . À la gare Saint-Lazare, ils sont pris en charge par les agents
— Johanna Ghiglia (@JohannaGhiglia)
SNCF fallen trees were to blame for the delay. It said that passenger tickets would also be refunded, and offered food and water to stranded travellers.
After many hours’ delay, some trains finally arrived in Paris at around 2h30, with passengers requiring assistance given taxis to nearby hotels.
Services are still slightly delayed this morning (Wednesday August 8), after extra trains were scheduled early this morning.
In a statement, : “We have made sure that two trains left very early this morning, to allow travellers to get to Paris. Normal service is expected by midday.â€
Emergency services were also called throughout the night to help people caught due to fallen trees and flash flooding on the roads. Most roads are have been cleared.
Around 700 homes in the Seine-Maritime due to fallen and damaged cables.
en
— Eric Succab (@SuccabEric)
A 0h30 le 08/08 le débitage des arbres tombés en raison des très violents orages continue sur la ligne Paris Caen sur les 2 voies
Strong winds, heavy rain and storm conditions were notably seen between Barentin and Rouen, causing dangerous conditions on many main roads, including the A150 motorway.
Emergency services in the region for flooding, parts of roofs ripped off houses, and fallen trees on roads.
Smaller roads were also closed as the pompiers worked to improve access.
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