Emergency crews are cleaning up after a storm bearing record-breaking winds left at least one person dead and more than a million without power across the island of Ireland and Scotland
Ireland has called in help from England and France to restore power to hundreds of thousands of people after the most disruptive storm for years.
One of the strongest storms in decades leads to cancelled flights, suspended rail services, and closed schools.
A rare “stay at home” warning has been issued for parts of the United Kingdom and Ireland as a severe storm lashes the region, bringing dangerous 100mph (160 kmh) winds and unleashing travel chaos.
A powerful storm has left hundreds of thousands of homes without power and caused massive travel disruptions in the United Kingdom.
Met Éireann and the Met Office have issued red alerts. The British newspaper "The Sun" describes it as the "storm of the century".
Damage and power outages have been reported Friday as energy from a storm system that produced record snowfall along the Gulf Coast is bashing Western Europe with heavy precipitation and powerful wind gusts.
Storm Eowyn barrelled in from the Atlantic yesterday causing havoc across Ireland, Northern Ireland and Scotland and leaving hundreds of thousands of homes without power,
Earlier red warnings covered the entirety of Ireland and Northern Ireland. Now the most serious alert covers parts of Scotland as the storm brings winds posing a danger to life.
Winds reached 100mph as Storm Eowyn left one person dead, more than a million people without power and caused significant travel disruption across the UK and Ireland. Rail services, flights and ...
One person has died in Ireland and hundreds of thousands of homes are without power in the UK as Storm Éowyn brought record-breaking wind gusts. The man died when a tree fell on his car in County Donegal, Gardaí (Irish police) said.