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China’s Spring Festival return-trip transport spree to appear today
BEIJING—Chinese transportation
departments forecast that the return-trip travel peak of the Spring
Festival may come on Monday, as millions of people will return to work
after holiday travels or festive family gatherings.
A spokesman with the Ministry of Railways said that the ministry has
arranged 226 special trains to address the looming travel wave, which
may surge on the fifth day of the week-long Lunar New Year holiday, one
day earlier than the previous years. He explained that the return-trip
travel spree used to appear on the sixth day of the holiday. However,
this year’s rescheduled Spring Festival holiday started one day earlier
— starting from the eve of Chinese Lunar New Year to the sixth day,
which may move up the return-trip travel peak one day earlier.
Xinhua’s sources with local railway departments in the national capital
of Beijing, south China’s Guangdong Province and east China’s Shanghai
all reported that pressure of return-trip travel are getting heavier on
Sunday, and may reach an acme on Monday. The Guangdong provincial
railway department told Xinhua that departure train tickets for the next
three days had been sold out on Friday, the third day of the week-long
holiday. The largest passenger flow is expected on Monday.
A tidal wave of passengers began to hit back China’s eastern railways,
according to the Shanghai Railway Bureau on Saturday, after a short
break of the snarled transport taking home gatherings passengers away
from the commercial hub ahead and at the beginning of the holiday. Two
railway stations in Beijing forecast that the total daily passenger
arrivals would exceed 100,000 on Monday and Tuesday.
Ctrip.com, one of China’s leading on-line ticket booking agencies
suggested that no discount air tickets were available for flights to
Chinese big cities of Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Chongqing from
Monday to Wednesday. The Ministry of Communications observed a rising
traffic on short-distance road travels, and a recovery of cross-province
passenger transport, which had been damaged in many expressway sections
in snow-hit eastern, central and southern China regions.
On Saturday, a total of 23.5 million passengers chose road traffic for
travel, 1.48 million more than that of Friday and 2.12million more than
the figure for the same day of last year, according to the ministry’s
figure. Traffic in disaster-hit China has largely been back to normal,
with only a few highway sections still being closed due to frozen road
surface, the Ministry of Public Security said here Saturday.
Traffic was smooth on the Beijing- Zhuhai expressway, a north-south
trunk road. The trunk road saw a surging flow of traffic at the section
bordering Guangdong and central Hunan Province, with 3,832 vehicles
heading south, up 70 percent from Friday, and 5,760 vehicles heading
north, down 20 percent, according to the ministry. In east China’s
Zhejiang Province, a section of the No. 13 provincial highway, a section
of the No. 22 provincial highway and two section of the No. 20
provincial highways remained closed to vehicles because of icy surfaces.
Road to the scenic Daming Mountain in Nanning, capital city of Guangxi
Zhuang Autonomous Region in southwest China, was still sealed, as
workers were clearing fallen trees and repairing cave-ins on the road.
Six sections of highway in north China’s Shaanxi Province were either
under traffic control or were blocked at night, the ministry said. More
than 140,000 police officers and 45,000 police cars were deployed on
roads nationwide to ensure safe and smooth traffic during the
traditional Spring Festival. By 6:00 p.m. Saturday, no major accident
with three or more killed were reported, according to the ministry.
The snow, the heaviest in five decades in many places, has been falling
in China’s eastern, central and southern regions for almost a month. It
has caused death, structural collapse, blackouts, traffic chaos and
livestock and crop losses in 19 provinces, municipalities and regions.—Xinhua |