Gale-force winds and pounding rain today lashed Britain and France, killing at least five people, disrupting Christmas travel and leaving tens of thousands without power.
In Britain, three people died in pre-Christmas storms, including a man in Devon, southwest England, who jumped into a fast-flowing river to rescue his dog, police said. Two other deaths were in car accidents linked to bad weather.
A Russian sailor was also feared dead after falling overboard from a damaged cargo ship off the northwest French coast about 220 kilometres from Brest. Rescue workers called off their search late yesterday.
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A total of 145,000 French homes, mainly in the northwestern region of Brittany, were without electricity by early today evening, down from 240,000 in the morning, according to power supplier ERDF.
Britain's Energy Networks Association said engineers had restored power to some 420,000 homes but 130,000 remained cut off.
Air, road and rail traffic was disrupted across France, England and Wales. Ferry services in parts of the northern Netherlands were disrupted and a number of buildings have been damaged, including the PSV football stadium in the southern city of Eindhoven.
Britain's Environment Agency has 276 flood alerts and 162 more severe flood warnings in place, almost 120 of which are in southwest and southeast England. The Highways Agency has warned of dozens of road closures and localised flooding.
The French weather service had put 23 of the country's 96 metropolitan departments on orange alert -- its second-highest level -- for high winds and waves. Today afternoon the number affected had dropped to 16.
London's Gatwick Airport was expecting disruptions, with some flights likely to be diverted to other airports, and Heathrow Airport warned of problems and urged passengers to check flight details.
Flights to and from the northern French city of Lille were cancelled today due to strong winds but resumed later.
Some ferry services across the Channel have been halted as well as services between Scotland and Northern Ireland.