
A huge blizzard has begun to hit the US east coast and is expected to dump near-record levels of snow from Washington to New York.
More than 50 million people have been warned a “potentially paralysing storm” will drop up to 30ins (76cm) of snow in hours.
Southern states are already blanketed under 8ins and snow began falling in the nation’s capital at lunchtime.
Thousands of flights have been cancelled and people told to stay home.
The weather system affects a huge swath of the country, from Arkansas in the south to Massachusetts in the north-east, with eight people killed so far.
A rush for supplies led to long queues and empty shelves at supermarkets on Friday.
Washington is expected to be worst-hit. Mayor Muriel Bowser warned residents of 30ins of snow – that would beat the city’s record of 28in (71cm) that fell during a two-day period in 1922.
“I want to be very clear with everybody, we see this as a major storm. It has life and death implications,” she said.
High winds could compound problems, with 30mph (50km/h) winds forecast for Manhattan on Saturday, and even stronger gusts in Washington and Baltimore.
In summary:
More than 6,000 flights have been cancelled for Friday and Saturday
Around 8ins of snow in Tennessee and Arkansas, 2ins in Mississippi
In Nashville major highways are “pure gridlock”, according to the highway patrol
States of emergency declared in Tennessee, North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, the District of Columbia and parts of other states
Eight people have been killed in car crashes in Tennessee, North Carolina, Kentucky and elsewhere
The capital’s transport system – the second busiest in the US – will close all weekend
Many events, including two sold-out concerts by singer Garth Brooks in Baltimore, have been postponed
As the weather system approached the country’s most populous city, New York Mayor Bill de Blasio urged residents to be ready.
“We’re bracing for the first big storm of the winter. I want to let my fellow New Yorkers know we’re prepared, the agencies here are ready for what’s coming up ahead,” he said.
Facing criticism for saying he would be staying on the presidential campaign trail, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie reversed course, tweeting: “I’m sorry, [New Hampshire] but I gotta go home – we got snow coming.”
National Weather Service director Louis Uccellini said the system had “the potential of being an extremely dangerous storm that could affect over 50 million people”.
He added: “We are talking about a potentially paralysing storm that is already setting up.”
Boston, which bore the brunt of repeated snowstorms last year, is expected to escape relatively lightly this time, with just a few inches.
Courtesy of BBC News
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