Heavy snowfall has led to large parts of the country battling transport havoc, as forecasters yesterday issued a red alert - the highest on a scale of five - warning of more snow and sleet in the coming days.
The snow, the most in 50 years in many areas, has fallen in the central, eastern and southwestern parts of the country in recent days, paralyzing air, rail and highway traffic and stranding tens of thousands of passengers amid a pre-holiday travel peak.
Almost 150,000 passengers were stuck at Guangzhou railway station by Saturday night after a power failure caused by snow, ice and sleet stopped more than 136 electric trains in Hunan province on the trunk line between Beijing and Guangzhou.
Though the power supply resumed at 4 pm on Saturday, 50 trains remain stranded between Hengyang in Hunan and Guangzhou.
A Guangzhou railway official warned yesterday that the number of stranded passengers in Guangzhou could hit 600,000 today.
"Last night, 100,000 passengers packed the square in front of the railway station; another 50,000 found shelter inside the building or under nearby flyovers," said an official in Guangzhou.
In cold and drizzly weather, Chen Zhenyu had spent more than 12 hours on the railway station square before she could board her train home last night.
"I dared not sleep because I didn’t know when my train would leave," the migrant worker from Hubei province told China Daily before she boarded the train more than 10 hours behind schedule.
"But I feel lucky because I can finally board the train to go home to spend the Lunar New Year with my family," said the woman in her 20s.
She said after waiting 12 hours, some of her coworkers returned to their factories because they didn’t know when their trains would depart.
The Ministry of Railways has dispatched about 100 diesel locomotives to move the electric trains and ordered 63 trains to bypass the non-operational section and take different routes via the Beijing-Kowloon line or the Shanghai-Kunming line.
The ministry also sent 35 trains from Beijing, Wuhan and Nanchang to help the stranded passengers.
Road traffic between Hunan and Guangdong provinces has also ground to a halt. Traffic was at a standstill yesterday on the southern section of the expressway linking Beijing with Zhuhai in Guangdong, where 60,000 people were stuck in 20,000 vehicles.
Several regional airports were shut down by the weather, including the one in Nanjing, capital of Jiangsu province.
Hunan's Huanghua Airport has been closed since Friday in the worst cold snap in a decade.
Snow has affected the lives of 25.22 million people across the province, killing seven, including three power company workers who died while removing ice from a 50-meter tall tower that collapsed on Saturday afternoon.
The Central Meteorological Station said the extreme weather was likely to continue for a week, especially in the southern, northwestern and central regions.
"There hasn't been any rise in temperatures or any room for optimism," said Yang Guiming, the chief weatherman.
Questions:
1. Weather forecasters are predicting what kind of weather in the next few days over most of China?
2. Up to how many stranded passengers might be in Guangzhou today?
3. The Ministry of Railways has ordered 63 trains to take different routes via which two lines?
Answers:
1.More snow and sleet.
2.600,000.
3.Beijing-Kowloon line and Shanghai-Kunming line.
(英語點(diǎn)津 Celene 編輯)
About the broadcaster:
Bernice Chan is a foreign expert at China Daily Website. Originally from Vancouver, Canada, Bernice has written for newspapers and magazines in Hong Kong and most recently worked as a broadcaster for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, producing current affairs shows and documentaries.