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11 electricians die while restoring power supply in snow-hit zone
BEIJING—A total of 11
electricians have so far died in the course of their duty bringing power
supply back to regions blacked out by the worst snowstorm to hit China
in more than five decades.
Of the total, nine were from the State Grid Corp of China and two were
from the smaller China Southern Power Grid, Xinhua learned late Monday.
China’s rescue workers had managed to restore electricity supply to
17.68 million households in 51 counties by Monday noon.
The severe winter weather has killed dozens of people and disrupted
transport and power supplies in a large swathe of China’s southern,
central and eastern regions. It had killed 60 people and inflicted a
direct economic loss of about 53.8 billion yuan (7.5 billion yuan) by
Jan. 31, according to the Ministry of Civil Affairs (MOCA).
The severe weather, coupled with foggy weather in southern China, has
forced the cancellation of 47 flights and delayed another 1,006 in the
one day to 4 p.m. on Monday, the General Administration of Civil Affairs
of China (CAAC) said. All the airports in the snowstorm-hit regions,
except the small regional ones at Tongren and Liping of Guizhou, had
reopened on Monday, according to the CAAC.
The number of passengers stranded at Guangzhou railway station stood at
80,000 on Monday, 12,000 fewer than a day earlier and sharply lower from
its peak of 800,000 last week. The Ministry of Finance (MOF) on Monday
allocated another 700 million yuan (97.3 million dollars) in relief
funds to seven regions hardest hit by the snowstorm and freezing rain,
including Guizhou, Jiangxi and Hubei.
The MOF and MOCA also earmarked 710 million yuan of allowance subsidies
to the poor in the seven regions. The urban poor in the regions will
each receive 15 yuan in monthly temporary subsidy and the rural poor 10
yuan over the three months starting from February. The Chinese govrnment
has stepped up relief efforts as the snowstorm is forecast to continue
to ease in the coming five days before a milder snowy and rainy weather
hits southern regions from Feb. 10.
Chinese President Hu Jintao called on the public on Monday to hold the
firm belief of victory over the weather crisis that is still plaguing
the southern part of the country.
Hu also stressed that the public should not overlook the situation and
task of the current relief work. “We have to continue to put relief work
as the top priority and carry it out in real earnest,” Hu, who is also
the general secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central
Committee, said during his meeting on Monday with non-CPC personalities.
“To ensure transportation, electricity supply and people’s livelihood
are current priorities in relief work,” Hu added. China’s democratic
parties, All-China Federation of Industry and Commerce, and
personalities of non-party affiliation have played an important role in
the relief work, he said.—Xinhua |