Roads and bridges have been closed across Scotland as 100mph winds batter the country. Police have confirmed that there have been several collisions due to adverse weather conditions caused by Storm Eowyn. It comes as hurricane-force winds continue to batter Scotland as Storm Eowyn arrives.
The rare warning takes effect with schools closed, supermarkets shut, power cuts and people told not to travel in the affected area.
The rare warning takes effect with schools closed, supermarkets shut, power cuts and people told not to travel in the affected area.
Two sisters visited the same bridge in Scotland where they were last seen about 12 hours before they disappeared, according to police.
Eliza and Henrietta Huszti, both 32, vanished earlier this month in Scotland, and a police report revealed their chilling final message to their landlady.
Laura Paton has been appointed as Scotland’s next Police Investigations and Review Commissioner (PIRC) . Currently His Majesty’s Chief Inspector of Prosecution in Scotland, Ms Paton will take up her new role April 1 for a five-year period.
Police Scotland are making preparations for Storm Eowyn hitting tomorrow. Officers have warned the public not to underestimate the red weather alert that has been issued, as Glasgow braces for 90mph winds.
Dad Mark Gordon, 36, and his six-year-old daughter Hope were found dead at a home in near Edinburgh in Scotland on Monday - their deaths are currently being treated as 'unexplained'.
Record breaking 114mph winds cause ‘unprecedented’ damage as hundreds of flights cancelled - Millions of mobile phone users got an emergency alert as people in Scotland and Northern Ireland warned to
A section of the A1 in East Lothian has been closed in both directions due to a number of overturned vehicles, including a lorry, amid Storm Eowyn. Police Scotland said the road was closed between Spott Roundabout in Dunbar and Cockburnspath in Berwickshire on Friday.
Two red weather warnings are in place as winds of up to 100mph are forecast to hit Northern Ireland and Scotland.