BEIJING, Jan. 31 (Xinhua) -- China has stepped up
relief work for areas affected by ice and snow by mobilizing women's and youth
organizations and military forces. The government also offered help to Taiwan
compatriots and businessmen on the mainland who have been affected by the
weather.
Premier Wen Jiabao on Wednesday visited passengers
stranded at the railway station in the southern city of Guangzhou. He promised
them that the government would do its best to ensure they got home for lunar New
Year.
Heavy snow and icy rain falling since Jan. 10 have
brought traffic to a standstill at peak season, when millions of Chinese are on
their way home to celebrate the Spring Festival.
The State Council announced on Wednesday that the
central government would offer help to Taiwan compatriots and businessmen on the
mainland who were also affected.
"The Taiwan Affairs Office is looking for Taiwan
enterprises suffering snow disasters and would provide the maximum possible help
to them," Yang Yi, a spokesman of the Taiwan Affairs Office of the State
Council, told a regular news conference.
The All-China Women's Federation (ACWF) has donated
more than 4million yuan (530,000 U.S. dollars) to areas affected by snow-related
disasters in central and southern China.
Women's organizations across the country were urged
to provide aid to women and children from poor families in those areas,
according to a circular issued by the ACWF on Tuesday.
The Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Youth
League (CCYL) granted membership dues to support its members' disaster relief
activities in nine provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities.
The nine areas seriously affected by snow and ice
included Hunan, Hubei, Guizhou, Anhui, Jiangxi, Gansu and Sichuan provinces, the
Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region and Chongqing City.
The CCYL also urged its members in disaster-stricken
areas to help with disaster relief and emergency aid work.
The Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) handed out
419,000 quilts and 219,000 cotton-padded coats in response to a plea for help
from the State Disaster Relief Committee. The PLA's General Staff Department and
the General Logistics Department searched military warehouses across the nation
for quilts to send to storm-hit areas.
Meanwhile, traffic is slowly improving in southern
Chinese provinces hit by the worst winter weather in five decades. Thousands of
passengers, however, were still trapped on icy highways, the Ministry of Public
Security said on Wednesday.
The north-south trunk road remained blocked at
several sections. On expressways in central Hunan and Hubei provinces and
southern Guangdong Province, traffic began to move slowly. But on the highway
linking the eastern Anhui Province with neighboring Zhejiang Province and in
eastern Jiangxi Province, many vehicles and people were stranded.
However, traffic movement in the southern Guangxi
Zhuang Autonomous Region has been totally restored.
Unusual cold, heavy snow, sleet and ice rain has hit
14 provinces in central and south China in the past two weeks. More than 77.8
million people had been affected by Monday afternoon, with 38 people killed
since Jan. 10, according to the Ministry of Civil Affairs.