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Chinese passengers warned not to swarm to recovering railways
BEIJING—China’s railway
watchdog has warned passengers not to worsen overcrowding at stations by
flocking to the country’s slowly-recovering rail network.
Rail shipping capacity on the southern section of the Beijing-Guangzhou
trunk rail line is gradually recovering from the snow snarl but remains
limited, said Wang Yongping, Ministry of Railways spokesman, on
Saturday.
He said stranded passengers must be sent on their way first, and advised
others not to swarm train stations in case of causing traffic jams or
wasting their time. At least 1.4 million passengers in Guangzhou were
still waiting to leave on trains at 6 a.m. on Saturday, the ministry
said.
Wang said the 1.4 million people could board home-bound trains before
the Spring Festival, or the Chinese Lunar New Year, which is five days
away.
The worst freezing weather the country has seen in the past five decades
has wreaked traffic havoc across central and southern China since
mid-January.
The local government has spared no effort to disperse the held-up
passengers, but many had rushed back to the station since Wednesday
after hearing railway traffic is resuming, trying to get a train home
for family reunion ahead of the festival.
“The railways can’t go beyond their capacity to meet everyone’s need,”
Wang said. “We have to say sorry to those who couldn’t get tickets.”
Meanwhile, authorities urged on Saturday that local tourism watchdogs
must prevent tourists from entering snow-hit regions and release weather
information in a timely fashion.
Business has been halted at scenic spots in regions badly hit by the
cold spell, the national office in charge of holiday affairs said.
The Ministry of Railways said it has dispatched 18 special trains with
relief materials, such as snow-removing equipment, power net-mending
tools, instant food and quilts, in the past four days.
On Saturday, 125,000 garments, quilts and sleeping bags, as well as
676,000 candles, were loaded on a special train in Beijing and rushed to
the central Hunan Province, one of the most snow-ravaged regions.
The snow has inflicted a total economic loss of about 53.9 billion yuan
(7.5 billion U.S. dollars) over the past three weeks, the Ministry of
Civil Affairs said on Friday.
—Daily Mail, People’s Daily news exchange item |