Heavy storms disrupted air, sea and road transport in Britain Monday, while a cargo ship was swept onto a beach in France and one person reported missing, emergency officials said. Dozens of flights were cancelled at British airports including London's Heathrow due to the storms, described as possibly the biggest of the winter by British experts, local reports said. Belgium was also braced for the tempest, expected to last into Tuesday, with forests bordering Brussels closed to traffic for fear of trees being felled by the winds. Amid gale-force winds of up to 80 mph (130 kph) sweeping in from the Atlantic and driving rain, British coastguards scrambled to help a stricken tanker in the Channel off the southern English coast, a spokesman said. Airports were among the worst hit. “We have had to cancel some short-haul flights and there are likely to be delays to all services,” said a British Airways spokesman, citing precautionary measures taken by air traffic controllers. The storm hit first in Cornwall and Devon in the southwest of the country, before sweeping east across England and Wales. On land there was widespread disruption of trains in southern England, including London where underground train services were also hit by flooding, while fallen trees were reported in a number of places, disrupting road traffic. At sea, the main Channel port of Dover closed as winds of up to 80 mph (130 kph) hit the south coast, preventing ferries from operating. Further west a Swedish tanker with 13 crew on board got into difficulties off the Isle of Wight, coastguards said. At least one coastguard tug was sent to help the stricken 11,000-tonne vessel. “We launched in force 11 winds,” said lifeboat spokesman John Keyworth. __