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China battles blizzard, quake victims safe

English.news.cn   2013-11-18 17:50:40            

A sanitation worker clears the snow on a road in Harbin City, capital of northeast China's Heilongjiang Province, Nov. 17, 2013. Traffic and schools have been hit in northeast China's Heilongjiang and Jilin provinces as a blizzard closed expressways and schools and delayed flights. (Xinhua/Zhang Qingyun)

CHANGCHUN, Nov. 18 (Xinhua) -- China has been battling the first blizzard of the winter for a third day, with deaths reported on dangerous, icy roads.

The blizzard has swept through the northeast Chinese provinces of Jilin, Heilongjiang and Liaoning since Saturday, leaving many highways and schools closed, and flights and trains delayed on Monday.

CITIES IN SLOW MOTION

"Right now, the city is pretty much like the world in the slow-motion modes often seen in Hollywood romances," wrote one Harbin citizen on Weibo, a Chinese version of Twitter, to portray the provincial capital of Heilongjiang trapped in traffic jams.

However, the reality is far less romantic.

At least four people have been killed and seven others injured in traffic accidents on slippery frozen roads in Jilin.

The provincial public security department has mobilized extra traffic police to conduct 24-hour patrols of the roads and urged drivers to show caution.

Frozen highways have been closed in most northeastern cities. Though air and rail traffic have remained operational, there have been reports of delays to flights and trains.

In the populous downtown areas, the traffic is even worse. Hundreds of vehicles have been creeping along the streets of Harbin at the same speed as pedestrians.

Zhao Yuwen, a taxi driver in Harbin, told Xinhua that his first and last fare of the day took him over an hour, rather than the usual 10 minutes in good weather.

"It's only 5 km from the train station to the provincial hospital, but it took much more time than usual today. So, I decided to go back home earlier and won't work until the storm's over," said Zhao.

As vehicles struggled their way through snow with an average depth of 20 cm, there have been long queues at bus stops and taxi stands.

Harbin resident Liu Zhi complained of waiting over half an hour for a bus before giving up and sharing a taxi with others.

More than 20,000 police and members of the public have been working in rounds to clear snow and ice from the streets, but their efforts have not been enough, with snow continuing to accumulate.

Despite the inconveniences, many citizens have shown warmth in the chilly days by helping each other.

Pictures of people lending a hand to push cars trapped in snow have sprung up on Weibo and won thousands of "like" hits.

QUAKE VICTIMS WARM UP

Luckily, victims from the twin earthquakes that jolted Songyuan City of Jilin on October 31, resettled in warm shelters before the blizzard.

More than 4,000 households were affected in Chaganhua Town, the epicenter of the quakes with a magnitude of 5.5 and 5.0 respectively.

Though no deaths were reported, many people's houses have been left unlivable.

Most of the quake victims have found a place to live by renting houses or turning to relatives for help. However, some have had to turn to shelters built by the government.

Liu Yanguang was among the first group from Yingtu Village who moved into the government-sponsored temporary shelters.

Liu's brick-mud home was razed in the quake, and the family of five are now sharing a 25-square-meter room with a heated brick bed and kitchen.

Though the temperature has dropped to minus 10 degrees centigrade outside, the temperature inside the room has reached 20 degrees.

"It is even warmer than the house we used to live in," said Liu.

The shelter is made of steel and benzene boards, whose heat preservation effect is even better than brick houses, according to Zhang Yi, manager in charge of the construction work.

"It is also strong enough to stand quakes above 8.0-magnitude and strong snowstorms," said Zhang.

So far, 270 such steel shelters have been built in the quake area.

SCHOOLS TO CLOSE FOR ANOTHER DAY

The education authority in Jilin told Xinhua that all kindergartens, primary and junior high schools were closed on Monday in the cities of Changchun, Jilin and Baishan, where snow was more than 20 cm deep.

"Students' safety is our top priority. Where the weather is not that bad, closure of schools is not mandatory," said Lu Lin, head of the school security office under the Jilin Provincial Department of Education.

On Monday morning, meteorological observatories issued warnings for heavier snow during the next 24 hours, adding that the blizzard was expected to wane on Tuesday.

In response to the forecast, Harbin City decided all kindergartens and schools would remain shut on Tuesday.

Related:

In pictures: Blizzard batters traffic in NE China

In pictures: Heavy snow blankets NE China

Blizzard batters traffic in NE China

HARBIN, Nov. 17 (Xinhua) -- Traffic and schools have been hit in northeast China's Heilongjiang and Jilin provinces as a blizzard closed expressways and schools and delayed flights.  Full story

Alert maintained for NE China blizzards

BEIJING, Nov. 17 (Xinhua) -- China's top meteorological authority on Sunday continued to warn of prolonged heavy snow that has battered northeast China since Saturday. Full story

Editor: Chen Zhi
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