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  • 15
    Mar
    2013
    1:20pm, EDT

    Winter storm strands thousands of motorists overnight in eastern Europe

    Szilard Gergely / AFP - Getty Images

    A man walks past a damaged truck at the site of an accident on the E71 motorway, near the Croatian, Slovenian and Hungarian borders on Friday, a day after a heavy snow storm hit the area.

    By Krisztina Than, Reuters

    BUDAPEST - Hungary deployed tanks to reach thousands of motorists trapped in heavy snow on Friday as a sudden cold snap and high winds struck parts of the Balkans, Slovakia and Poland, leaving at least two people dead.

    Snow stranded people in cars, buses and trains through the night and conspired with strong winds to cut off dozens of towns and villages in Hungary.

    "The situation is most critical on the M1 motorway (linking Budapest and Vienna) where hundreds of cars are stranded in the snow, most of them for 18-20 hours now," said Marton Hajdu, spokesman for the National Directorate for Disaster Management.

    Reuters photographer traveling with a rescue convoy said high winds had caused snowdrifts on the motorway up to three feet high.

    People took to Facebook to appeal for help.


    "At the Gyorszentivan exit on the motorway I have friends stranded since yesterday evening," wrote Ibolya Csukovics. "Can anyone help? They've run out of food and drink."

    The government said it had sent in tanks and other military vehicles with caterpillar tracks.

    The weekend's premier league and second tier football fixtures were canceled, with night-time temperatures expected to drop as low as 5 degrees Fahrenheit).

    After a relatively mild winter for much of the region, almost 200,000 people in Hungary, Bulgaria and Slovakia were left shivering without electricity on Friday. Heavy rain hit parts of Serbia and Bosnia.

    In Bulgaria, one woman was killed when scaffolding collapsed in high winds in the central town of Gabrovo, and a school was evacuated in the southern town of Krichim when wind tore off the roof.

    To the south, in Kosovo, a 10-year-old girl drowned when a river burst its banks in heavy rain in the northern town of Skenderaj. Dozens of homes were flooded in the west of the country, a Reuters reporter said.

    "The situation is alarming," Klina municipality spokeswoman Samije Gjergjaj told Reuters. She said some 300 people were stranded by floodwater.

    "There's just one small boat evacuating these people," said Gjergjaj. "We're waiting for the state emergency services to help out."

    Heavy snow also paralyzed parts of southeastern Poland, where police banned heavy lorries from entering the city of Rzeszow for fear they would get stuck.

    In eastern Slovakia, snow stranded some 40 lorries on a highway in the High Tatras region. The army deployed hundreds of soldiers to help out and authorities appealed to people to avoid venturing out by car. 

    Alexey Gromov / AFP - Getty Images

    People struggle against wind and drifting snow in the Belarus capital, Minsk, on Friday.

    14 comments

    Zsofia you must be kidding?You do not even know what are you writing about. You disrespect all the firemen, police, ambulance, army crews who are facing the worst challange of their profession and were out there from the first moment. Stop being smart and blame things on someone else.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: weather, bosnia, serbia, winter, hungary, poland, slovakia
  • 2
    Jan
    2013
    1:25pm, EST

    Zsolt Czegledi / EPA

    Driving in a winter wonderland

    A car drives under frost-covered trees just outside Debrecen, 140 miles east of Budapest, Hungary, on Jan. 2.

    View more Winter Wonderland photos.

    Previously on PhotoBlog:

    • Mountain bikers race down snowy slopes in Switzerland
    • Making tracks in Germany
    • Winter may not start until tomorrow, but many around the world are already feeling its chill

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: weather, winter, snow, hungary, environment, budapest
  • 14
    Jun
    2012
    3:25pm, EDT

    Laszlo Balogh / Reuters

    Hungarian Istvan Puskas poses with his wooden chopper in Tiszaors, 100 miles east of Budapest on Thursday. Puskas, a 52-year-old tractor driver, built his bike in two years from firewood.

    Hungarian man builds motorcycle out of wood

    .

    3 comments

    Is the wood new enough to count as a "Green Job"?

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    Explore related topics: art, carpenter, hungary, motorcycle, world-news, wood
  • 11
    Apr
    2012
    8:19am, EDT

    Zsolt Czegledi / EPA

    Angler nets 7-foot-4, 156-pound catfish

    Hungarian angler Lajos Csendes poses with a gray catfish measuring 224 cm (7 feet 4 inches) and weighing 71 kilograms (156 lb). Csendes caught the fish, thought to be approximately 30-40 years old, in Lake Kadarcsi, near Balmazujvaros, Hungary, on April 11.

    Previously on PhotoBlog:

    • Fishermen reel in shark the size of a school bus
    • Panning for slippery, translucent gold in Maine
    • Give a man a fish, you'll feed him for a day. Let him fish in the Bassmaster Classic, he can win $500,000

    1 comment

    This is the garbage that's been coming into America for the last 15 years or more !! Wife beaters ,baby killers ,child abusers ...... These people want to live their life like it's the year one ! They don't want to change a thing ,to them this is acceptable.

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    Explore related topics: hungary, fish, catfish, fishing
  • 21
    Feb
    2012
    12:30pm, EST

    Masked revellers celebrate the Buso carnival in Hungary

    Bernadett Szabo / Reuters

    Masked revellers participate in the traditional Buso Carnival in Mohacs, 200 km (124 miles) south of Budapest, on Feb 21 for the Buso Carnival, which lasts for six days, locals celebrate the end of winter and party before the start of Lent. According to legend, the masks helped locals scare away the Turks in the 16th century.

    Bela Szandelszky / AP

    A masked Busho man jokes with tourists while marching through the town of Mohacs in southern Hungary during the annual Busho Carnival, on Feb. 21. This end of winter carnival tradition dates back to the 16th century to Hungary's Ottoman occupation when men of the Sokac ethnic group (related to the Croatians) of Mohacs dressed up in sheep fur and wooden masks in a bid to frighten off their Turkish invaders.

    Bela Szandelszky / AP

    Masked Busho men carry a coffin, symbolizing the end of winter, before marching through the town of Mohacs in southern Hungary during the annual Busho Carnival, on Feb. 21. This end of winter carnival tradition dates back to the 16th century to Hungary's Ottoman occupation when men of the Sokac ethnic group (related to the Croatians) of Mohacs dressed up in sheep fur and wooden masks in a bid to frighten off their Turkish invaders.

    Attila Kisbenedek / AFP - Getty Images

    A member of Mohacs Busok (Mask-people from Mohacs town) steps out from their local base on Feb.21 prior to their carnival masquerade. The Busojaras (Hungarian, meaning 'Buso-walking') is an annual celebration of the Sokci (Croatians) living in the town of Mohacs, held at the end of the Carnival season and ending the day before Ash Wednesday. The celebration features Busos and includes folk music, masquerading, parades and dancing. Busojaras lasts six days, usually during February.

     Related link:

    From Rio de Janeiro to Venice, revelers took to the streets in colorful costumes.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

     

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: religion, hungary, world-news, carnival, lent
  • 7
    Feb
    2012
    6:32pm, EST

    Burning through money in Hungary

    Laszlo Balogh / Reuters

    Banknotes that have been removed from circulation await processing at the logistics center of the National Bank of Hungary in Budapest on Feb. 7. More than a $1 billion worth of forints will be converted to fuel and handed out to charities.

    By Jon Sweeney, NBC News

    Every year Hungary recycles approximately $1 billion worth of worn out forints, and converts the used currency into bricks. These bricks are sent to several charities, so they can burn them as heating fuel. The program allows the organization to cover up to a third of their annual heating costs.

    According to Reuters, Hungary is the only country to recycle its worn cash for fuel each year.

    Laszlo Balogh / Reuters

    Tons of shredded and compressed banknotes are unloaded from a truck at the Foundation to Help Autism in Miskolc, Hungary on Feb. 7.

    Laszlo Balogh / Reuters

    Banknotes shredded and compressed into heating fuel are distributed at the Foundation to Help Autism in Miskolc, Hungary.

    Laszlo Balogh / Reuters

    Banknotes converted into bricks are burned as heating fuel at the Foundation to Help Autism in Miskolc, Hungary on Feb. 7.

     

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: business, economy, europe, winter, money, hungary, world-news
  • 27
    Jan
    2012
    9:22am, EST

    Honoring the victims of the Holocaust 67 years after the liberation of Auschwitz

    Bela Szandelszky / AP

    Holocaust survivor Eva Szirtes pays respect to relatives at a memorial wall bearing the engraved names of tens of thousands of victims of the Nazi Holocaust at the Holocaust Memorial Center, during Holocaust remembrance day in Budapest, Hungary, on Jan. 27. The remembrance day marks the day of the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camps 67 years ago.

    Jim Hollander / EPA

    A visitor to the 'Hall of Names' in the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial museum in Jerusalem, Jan. 27. The room holds 600 portraits of individual Jews who perished at the hands of the Nazis during the Holocaust of World War II and contains binders documenting more than 4,000,000 of those people. Today marks International Holocaust Remembrance Day on this day in 1945 that the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp was liberated by Soviet forces.

    John Mcconnico / AP

    A man smells a flower during the Holocaust remembrance memorial in Chisinau, Moldova on Jan. 27. The remembrance day marks the day of the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camps 67 years ago.

    AP reports:

    It's a huge question for observant Jews: How can one still believe in a merciful God after suffering through the worst genocide in history?

    As the world marks Holocaust Remembrance Day on Friday, members of Israel's most devout group will remember the victims with prayer, study of scripture and a deep conviction in a grand plan that is beyond their earthly comprehension.

    Many notable survivors, including Nobel laureate Elie Wiesel, have famously questioned where God was during the Holocaust. But survivors from the insular ultra-Orthodox community say they felt a divine presence even in the worst places imaginable.

    Read the full story.

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: israel, hungary, holocaust, world-news, moldova, auschwitz
  • 20
    Nov
    2011
    3:26pm, EST

    'Night of Baths' highlights benefits of thermal water in Hungary

    Bernadett Szabo / Reuters

    Bathers relax at the Rudas Bath during the "Night of Baths" in Budapest, Hungary, Nov. 20. Music and dance programs take place from 10 pm until 4am at the five most popular thermal baths in Budapest during the event.

    By Katie Cannon, Senior Multimedia Editor

    Although the thought of bacteria's tendency to grow in warm places kind of creeps me out, Rick Steves makes the public baths sound pretty appealing below. Sign me up.

    From a piece by Rick Steves that msnbc.com travel ran a ways back:

    Sitting in hundred-degree water under glorious Baroque domes, I felt my stress ebb away as I enjoyed some of Europe's most memorable people watching. Hungarians of all shapes and sizes were stuffed into tiny swimsuits, strutting their stuff. People floated blissfully in warm water. Speedo-clad intellectuals stood in chest-high water around chessboards and pondered their next moves. It's Budapest at its best.

    Read 'Taking the Plunge in Budapest' in its entirety.

    Bernadett Szabo / Reuters

    Bathers relax at the Rudas Bath during "Night of Baths" in Budapest, Hungary, Nov. 20.

    Bernadett Szabo / Reuters

    A man relaxes at the Rudas Bath during the "Night of Baths" in Budapest, Hungary, Nov. 20.

     

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: travel, hungary, world-news, budapest, thermal-bath
  • 7
    Sep
    2011
    8:13am, EDT

    A day's labor on a Hungarian farm

    By David R Arnott, NBC News

    The EPA today published a photo feature by Attila Balazs, who spent a day with a group of seasonal workers on a farm in eastern Hungary. According to Balazs, the laborers are poorly paid and seldom know what they will work on from day to day. During the summer harvest, their working day begins at 6 am and ends at 2 pm, avoiding the worst of the afternoon heat.

    Attila Balazs / EPA

    Day-workers gather at dawn in their home village of Tiszavasvari, some 200 km east of Budapest, Hungary, on August 22.

    Attila Balazs / EPA

    Seasonal day-workers ride the bus to their place of work at dawn. In season, some 15-20 workers are taken by bus to a 150 hectare fruit-farm in Tiszadob, about 18 km to the north, for agricultural work.

    Attila Balazs / EPA

    A worker shakes ripe fruit from a tree in a peach orchard.

    Attila Balazs / EPA

    Collecting peaches.

    Attila Balazs / EPA

    Shift manager Jozsef Vadasz, center, has dinner with his family at his home in Tiszavasvari after the day's work is finished.

     

    1 comment

    thank you first responders. thank you. it is a crime against all that is good in america that at least representatives from each firehouse, ambulance, police dept, all first responders , hospitals, and religious group are not included in the official ceremony. shame on you new york officials!!! ever …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: harvest, europe, labor, hungary, agriculture, world-news
  • 9
    Jul
    2011
    9:50am, EDT

    Hungarians slip slide away from the heat

    Laszlo Balogh / Reuters

    A boy enjoys a water chute in Mogyorod near Budapest, Hungary, July 9. Temperatures reached 96.8 degrees Fahrenheit.

     

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: weather, heat, hungary, budapest, temperatures, water-slide
  • 16
    Jun
    2011
    2:29pm, EDT

    Hungarians find a creative way to protest

    Zsolt Szigetvary / EPA

    A woman wears a mask during a demonstration of Hungarian police officers, firemen and prison guards near the Parliament building in Budapest, Hungary on June 16. Thousands of Hungarian police and firefighters protested against government plans to end early retirement, while unions disrupted traffic with a convoy of cars driving around the center of the Hungarian capital. Under the banner "Clowns' Revolution" a ballot box was set up near the parliament building, where people could "take back" votes they cast for Prime Minister Viktor Orban's conservative party Fidesz in elections last year.

    Imre Foldi / EPA

    Participants wear masks or clown outfits during a demonstration of Hungarian police officers, firemen and prison guards.

    By Chris A Wilson

    With lots of protests and riots happening recently all over the world, seeing protesters dressing up and getting creative came as a pleasant surprise.

    Related links:

    • Unions in Hungary protest government measures
    • Other World News

    1 comment

    Are they calling their govt a bunch of clowns?

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    Explore related topics: hungary, protest, world-news, clown
  • 14
    Jun
    2011
    7:57am, EDT

    Peter Kohalmi / AFP - Getty Images

    Long-tailed mayflies (Palingenia longicauda) dance around each other in large groups on the surface of the Tisza river near Tiszafured, Hungary, early in the evening on June 13.

    The brief, fizzing life of a mayfly

    According to AFP, mayfly larvae live underwater for three years, and then millions of these short-lived insects engage in a frantic rush to mate and reproduce before they perish in just a few hours during 'Tiszaviragzas' - the Tisza blooming season - which lasts from late spring to early summer every year. The species was once widespread across Europe, but has now disappeared from much of the continent.

    1 comment

    Very beautiful photo

    Show more
    Explore related topics: europe, hungary, nature, insects, mayflies, animal-tracks, tiszaviragzas
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