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Road, rail
transport returning to normal
Beijing—All road and rail
transport is stable as millions of people return from their Spring
Festival celebrations in the wake of the devastating snowstorms that
have plagued large parts of the country, the disaster relief and
emergency command center under the State Council said in a release on
Sunday night.
Passengers rush out of the Guangzhou railway station February 11,2008.
All road and rail transport is stable as millions of people return from
their Spring Festival celebrations in the wake of the devastating
snowstorms. [Agencies]
“We have managed to ease access to transportation amid the snowy
weather, and major highways and railways have resumed normal order,” the
center said in a daily brief.
By Sunday, the State Grid had restored the power supply to 22 million
customers, or 92.7 percent of those affected.
Highway transportation, which was severely affected by the month-long
snow disaster in many parts of the country, has also returned to normal.
About 28 million people traveled on expressways and trunk roads on
Sunday, up six million over the previous day.
However, some roads in Zhejiang and Yunnan provinces were still closed
because of ice, and traffic flows were affected in Yunnan because of icy
rain, the brief said.
Some 4,291 flights carrying 535,000 passengers took off on Sunday,
23,000 more than a day earlier. Also, some 460,000 people and more than
5,000 vehicles dispatched by the China Southern Power Grid had
contributed to the repair of 4,800 power transmission lines. In
particular, 68.4 percent of the lines in the southwestern Guizhou
province are back in use.
As affected areas gradually recover, health departments have so far
dispatched 155,600 medical professionals in a bid to prevent major
public health incidents. Nonetheless, land and meteorological
authorities in Hunan, the hardest-hit province, have warned of a
snow-induced secondary disaster.
In a joint statement, the provincial land and resources department and
meteorological station released this year’s first early warning of a
geological disaster, while calling on residents to remain alert to
potential geological abnormalities.
The snow is still 1-7 cm deep in most mountainous regions of Hunan.
Collapses, landslides and debris flows may occur as it melts in the
coming days, the statement said.
Small-scale secondary disasters are nothing new in some areas. On
February 3, a gas station in Nanjing, capital of Jiangsu province,
collapsed because of heavy snow, leaving four dead and 16 injured. In
the previous week, incidents involving residents falling to the ground
while cleaning their roofs were common.—Xinhua |