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Passengers are stranded at Guangzhou
Railway Station in south China's Guangdong Province, Jan. 26, 2008.
Consecutive snow, rain and cold weather have led to trains delay in
central and south China and stranded tens of thousands of passengers eager
to go home for the Spring Festival which falls on Feb. 7, 2008. (Xinhua
Photo) Photo
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Passengers wait in the lounge
room at a bus station in Hefei, the capital city of east
China's Anhui Province, Jan. 26, 2008. Prolonged snow, rain and cold
weather has led to train delays in central and south China and stranded
tens of thousands of passengers. (Xinhua Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, Jan. 26 (Xinhua) -- Prolonged snow, rain and cold weather has led
to train delays in central and south China and stranded tens of thousands of
passengers, in addition to expressway closures, flight cancellations and
relocations of people.
A total of 136 electric passenger trains came to a standstill on an artery
railway in Hunan Province after the local power supply system was damaged by
continuous snow and icy rain.
Technicians and workers with the Guangzhou Railway Group Corp., the
operating company, were using more than 100 diesel locomotives to pull the
electric locomotives carrying tens of thousands of passengers from a section
that suffered a sudden drop in power, a company spokesman said.
About 40,000 passengers were stranded at different stations along the trunk
line linking Beijing and Guangzhou in south China, he said. Another 50,000
passengers were delayed at Guangzhou Railway Station.
"We will do our best to resume traffic as soon as possible," he said.
The company had dispatched more than 10,000 technical workers to repair the
damaged power lines, and cancelled trains scheduled to depart from Guangzhou
Railway Station, especially those bound for Hunan, he said.
It had also ordered the transfer of some trains to other lines and refunds
to passengers reduce number of stranded people, he said.
Meanwhile, the company had dispatched workers with almost 10,000 kg of
rice, vegetables, meat, edible oil, and 20,000 boxes of instant noodles and
drinking water to serve passengers aboard the stranded trains, he said.
"It seems I will spend my Spring Festival holiday at this station," said a
passenger from Chenzhou, Hunan Province, who had been delayed for several hours
at Changsha Railway Station with 2,000 other people on Saturday.
"The coach service was suspended because the expressway had been shut down.
I thought it would be easier to go home by railway, but I never thought the
trains could be delayed by snow," he said.
Delays of up to at least nine hours in some stations were also reported in Kunming, Yunnan Province, and Shenzhen, in Guangdong Province.
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