The extreme cold weather that has swept across Eastern Europe has killed hundreds of people, particularly the homeless.
In Poland, at least five dozen street people have succumbed to the bitter cold that has featured temperatures as low as 20 degrees (Fahrenheit) below zero.
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The weather has been so brutal that Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk ordered local officials to lift the ban on allowing drunks into homeless shelters.
Police in Warsaw and other cities have encouraged the homeless and indigent into shelters while the brutal cold snap lasts.
According to reports, a great many, perhaps the majority, of Poland's homeless are severe alcoholics. More than 200 Polish street dwellers died last winter from hypothermia, BBC noted.
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Warsaw has thousands of homeless, many of whom live and sleep in underground heating ducts. Some are unwilling to enter shelters.
One homeless man told western media: "I don't want to go to a shelter. The truth is that I drink alcohol and that's strictly forbidden there.”
Monika Golebiewska, a Warsaw police officer, patrols a beat where many homeless congregate.
"Normally, when it's around zero [degrees], it's still ok. But now, it's become dramatic," she told reporters.
"Today we gave them white bean soup. Yesterday was the krupnik, a barley soup with bread and tins of food. It's impossible to convince them to go to homeless shelters. They've chosen this life -- they want to stay free.”
But she added grimly: "During each patrol, we're afraid we'll find someone who has died."
Despite Poland's relatively strong economy homelessness is a serious problem.
The Polish economy grew by 4.3 in 2011 (following a 3.9 percent jump in 2010), but the country's labor ministry estimated that the unemployment rate leaped to 13.3 percent in January 2012 from 12.5 percent in the prior month.
"Poland is better placed than its neighbors to weather the fallout from Europe's debt crisis, but it is still not immune," Capital Economics wrote in a research note.
