A new domestic transport peak fell yesterday as the week-long lunar
New Year holiday began winding to a close.
Hundreds of thousands, studying and working away from their home
towns, have begun to hit roads, rail and air links after spending
Spring Festival reunited with family. A great tide of Chinese
humanity is heading for the nation's major cities of Beijing,
Shanghai, Guangzhou and the flourishing east coast areas.
Non-stop charter flights across the Taiwan Straits were also
back in the skies bringing mainland-based Taiwan business people
and their families back. Some six flights took off yesterday,
flying to different destinations.
But it is China's railways which will bear the brunt of the
annual exodus. The Beijing Railway Administration predicted a flood
tide of passengers yesterday and today, the post-festival period
for some regions, including the capital.
Yesterday alone, some 200,000 passengers registered their return
to Beijing to resume work or studies in the Year of the
Rooster.
Another 160,000 passengers left Beijing for a variety of
reasons, business or social. The wise, however, have postponed
their journeys until quieter times resume.
An additional 28 trains have been brought in to reduce the load
on Beijing's rail links.
"The number of passengers who arrived in Beijing today is 44
percent higher
than that for the same period last year," said an employee surnamed
Yang with the Beijing West Railway Station, one of the two major
stations in the city.
Shanghai also encountered its busiest day yesterday since last
week.
Nearly 40 additional trains were added to help the passenger
flow, which totaled 130,000.
"People traveling back at the moment are mainly migrant workers
and local tourists touring outside," said a source with the
Shanghai Railway Administration (SRA).
Between February 9 and 13, a total of 2.38 million passengers
traveled on SRA trains, a figure unchanged on last year.
Zhejiang on the east coast and one of the biggest provinces for
attracting migrant workers in China, has witnessed a major
passenger influx since yesterday.
The local transport authority predicts the main rush will run
until tomorrow.
Major domestic airlines will also be hit over the next couple of
days by travelers returning after the holiday.
About 360,000 passengers took to the air yesterday.
Bad weather has impacted the travel situation and it has added
to the grim toll of road accidents, which have come to characterize
peak holiday periods.
A long-distance coach carrying about 60 passengers plunged into
a 50-metre-deep valley yesterday afternoon near Dushan County in
Guizhou Province, in the southwest.
Initial reports put the confirmed death toll at 15 with at least
20 seriously injured and 20 others still trapped in the wreckage by
6:30 pm, according to a Xinhua report.
On Sunday a grossly overloaded bus, which went out of control on
a mountain road in Zhejiang, left eight people dead and some 31
injured when it plunged down a gully.
The 19-seater was carrying 39 passengers when it plummeted off a
bridge and into a 10-metre-deep valley in Zuocun Township near
Dongyang City.
Transport authorities have called for tougher road safety
measures after another two fatal accidents over the lunar New Year
holiday claimed the lives of four people from Hong Kong.
An emergency statement demanding tour operators and travel
companies improve safety standards has been issued by the China
National Holiday Office.
(China Daily February 15, 2005)