YINCHUAN, April 8 (Xinhuanet)-- Northwest China's Ningxia Hui
Autonomous Region and its neighboring province of Gansu both
experienced their strongest sandstorms of the year Sunday, local
meteorological stations reported. The sandstorm and sand-drifting weather, which swept across
most parts of Ningxia today, has caused the visibility to decrease
to only 100 meters. Wuzhong city even reported encountering a
strong gale. Meteorologists said the sandstorm in Ningxia will subside by
Monday morning, causing the average temperature to drop over 10
degrees Celsius. Moderate or even heavy snowfalls are also
expected in the southern mountain areas after the windstorm dies
down tomorrow. Jinchang city in Gansu reported zero visibility today. Six
flights in Gansu were either canceled or forced to land in nearby
airports due to the poor weather conditions. The sandstorm and sand-drifting weather was caused by the
movement of strong cold air from Siberia or northwest China,
according to meteorological analysts. Enditem
The photo shows that a young man covers his mouth as a violent sand storm sweeps Lanzhou, capital city of northwest China's Gansu province April 8, 2001. Xinhua Photo
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