BEIJING, Jan. 27 (Xinhua) -- An unprecedented cold spell hitting half of
China has caused at least another dozen deaths, injured thousands and stranded
multitudes of travelers in the freezing weather by Sunday.
A bus carrying 41 people overturned on a slippery freeway in east China's
Jiangxi Province early Sunday, leaving five dead at the scene and injuring 10
others. The victims included three children, two of whom were dead and one
seriously injured.
The provincial meteorological bureau has warned drivers to take caution
since Friday as continuous sleet has covered highways and all urban and rural
roads with ice.
In the mountainous Guizhou Province in the southwest, a hospital in the
capital city of Guiyang has received at least 1,500 patients in the last five
days, most suffering fractures after falling on slippery roads.
Guizhou has suffered five deaths, 1,631 collapsed homes and widespread
blackouts.
At a hospital in the Buyi and Miao autonomous prefecture of Qiannan in the
remote south of Guizhou, snow and sleet have cut electricity and tap water since
Jan. 15. A hospital had to save power by canceling surgery to light up the
emergency ward.
"If the power supply doesn't resume any time soon, heating will be a real
problem," said Luo Laiquan, 63, of Qiannan.
The price of charcoal had climbed from eight yuan to 14 yuan a kilo, he
said.
The local government said bad weather had also stranded more than 40,000
passengers in at least 5,000 broken-down vehicles on expressways between Guizhou
and neighboring Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.
"We're trying to provide them with food and water, but several have passed
out in the cold, including a new mother and her one-month-old baby," said Huang
Zhengfu, secretary-general with the prefectural government.
He said the elderly and children were taken to a nearby hotel on Saturday.
In the central Hunan Province, one of the worst hit areas, seven people
have died and snow is affecting the lives of 25.22 million people in 14 cities
and 112 counties across the province.
Among the dead were three power company workers who died when their
equipment collapsed as they were removing ice from a 50-meter tall tower on
Saturday afternoon.
Heavy snow has also blanketed Diqing, a Tibetan autonomous prefecture in
the southwestern Yunnan Province, starting from Jan.19. As of Sunday morning,
Shangri-La had reported 35 centimeters of snow.
Though no deaths or injuries have been reported, the local government
estimated at least 100,000 people were affected as snow has cut roads, power and
drinking water, damaged at least 500 homes and destroyed at least 10,000
hectares of cropland.
In the eastern Jiangsu Province, the heaviest snow since 1984 virtually
closed the airport in the provincial capital of Nanjing on Sunday. In several
cities, the average precipitation was around20 millimeters.
In the aftermath of the massive train delays on the trunk rail link between
Beijing and Guangzhou on Saturday, the number of passengers stranded in
Hangzhou, capital of the eastern Zhejiang Province, soared to 30,000 on Sunday
compared with 5,000 reported on Saturday.
The delays of at least 136 trains in Hunan Province, a result of power
failure, stranded almost 150,000 passengers at Guangzhou Railway Station on
Saturday night.
Officials in Guangzhou have predicted as many as 600,000 people will be
stranded at the Guangzhou railway station if the problems are not solved by
Monday.
Local authorities said they were trying to provide shelter to passengers at
schools and other public facilities close to the railway station, including the
subway tunnels after the subway stops operation at midnight.