Special Report: China's war on snow
havoc
HANGZHOU, Feb. 3 (Xinhua) -- Trains, planes and buses
were scrambling to reach their destinations on Sunday in the eastern Chinese
city of Hangzhou during an interval in the heavy snow that has been wreaking
havoc on the country during the past few weeks.
Elsewhere, 100 trains were scheduled to depart from
Guangzhou, a southern boomtown in Guangdong Province favored by migrant workers.
The number of scheduled departures was close to usual, according to the
Guangzhou Railway Group.
Trains carried more than 120,000 stranded passengers
out of Guangzhou between 6 p.m. on Saturday and 6 a.m. on Sunday. About one
million people were still stranded at the Guangzhou Railway Station on Sunday
after snow caused a power failure in Hunan Province, a major trunk route between
Beijing and Guangzhou.
"Every possible wheel is moving," said a Hangzhou
Long-distance Transportation Company official.
Passengers queued to get on coaches that had been
cancelled since Jan. 26 due to the snow at the Hangzhou West Bus Station, while
the waiting room was full of travelers eager to get home.
A station official said more than 2,000 people had
stayed overnight at the station in hope of catching a bus, while the local
airport said it had spared no effort to transport as many as people from the
backlog of more than 10,000 people.
Hangzhou railway station managed to move 160,000
passengers within the first three days after rail traffic returned to normal on
Wednesday.
The snow started to hit Hangzhou on Jan. 26 and
lasted until Feb. 2. More snow is forecast on Monday, according to the local
meteorological bureau.
Hubei, Guizhou and other southern provinces also saw
intervals in the snow and sleet on Sunday. The Central Meteorological Station,
however, said more snow and sleet is forecast for the country's southern parts
on Monday and Tuesday.