Naked biker, topless row as Europe sizzles in heatwave
'Is it hot or what?' a naked man driving his moped wearing only his helmet and sandals asked police when he was stopped in Brandenburg.
A woman cools off in a water fountain on June 26, 2019 at the Lustgarten in central Berlin, where temperatures around 36 degrees are expected. Picture: Tobias SCHWARZ / AFP
German police cautioned a man riding naked on a moped while topless sunbathers sparked a row in Munich, as temperatures were to soar to record highs in several European countries on Wednesday.
Meteorologists blamed a blast of hot air from northern Africa for the heatwave early in the European summer, which could send thermometers above 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit) in France, Spain and Greece on Thursday and Friday.
Scientists warn that global warming could make such scorchers more frequent.
In Germany, where the 70-year-old record temperature for June of 38.5 degrees Celsius could be beaten on Wednesday, police in Brandenburg cautioned a naked man for driving his moped wearing only his helmet and sandals.
Brandenburg police, who described themselves as “speechless” over the incident, said on Twitter the man’s response when stopped was: “Is it hot or what?”
However, there was no joking in Munich after burly security guards ordered a group of women sunbathing topless on the banks of the Isar to put their bikini tops back on.
The move backfired, according to the Munich daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung, which quoted another sunbather as saying that she and others took their tops off “out of solidarity”.
Munich officials are discussing how much public nudity should be allowed, but Bavaria’s ruling conservative Christian Social Union (CSU) party went a step further.
An urgent motion was introduced in a city council meeting on Wednesday, reading “the bathing costume statutes of the state capital Munich will be amended to the effect that bathing costumes must completely cover the primary sex organs” — to allow topless bathing.
On the north coast, sweltering temperatures bent railway tracks out of shape on a popular tourist route near Rostock on the Baltic Sea and an official said a track-laying company were trying to fix the damage.
Authorities were taking no chances in France, where a heatwave in August 2003 was blamed for 15,000 deaths.
Some schools are expected to close on Thursday and Friday, while several cities including Paris and Lyon have restricted traffic to limit a build-up of pollution.
The country’s weather service, Meteo-France, says the intensity of the heat is unprecedented since 1947, when detailed surveys started.
In Spain, a TV weather presenter tweeted “el infierno (hell) is coming”, with the centre and northeast put on alert for soaring temperatures.
The mercury could top 39 degrees Celsius in Zaragoza or Navarre — a new record for June in those regions.
The worst is expected on Friday, when 33 of the 50 Spanish provinces face extreme temperatures, which could reach 44 degrees Celsius in Girona.
In Austria’s Innsbruck, the world-famous carriage horses were given time off as the city recorded 36.7 degrees Celsius late Tuesday, breaking the 2012 record for Tyrol state of 36.6 degrees.
Innsbruck passed legislation last year taking horse-drawn “fiaker” carriages off the streets when temperatures rise above 32 degrees.
In Poland, the interior ministry said 90 people have drowned this month while seeking to cool off in lakes or rivers.
In Lithuania, 27 people were reported to have drowned so far as temperatures in the Baltic state soared above 35 degrees.
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