The head of Changsha railway station in central China's Hunan
Province has been demoted after more than 100 people complained
they could not board a train despite having tickets in hand.
The Guangzhou Railway Group announced the demotion on Monday,
without giving details. It came four days after the dismissal of
the head of the Wuhu railway station over a passenger's death.
The passengers at Changsha station, including local university
students, were refused entry on the train from Jiujiang to Shaoyang
on Jan. 14 because it was already overloaded before arriving in
Changsha.
Their complaints, together with the death of the college student
who was pushed off the platform at Wuhu railway station and killed
by a train, have attracted nationwide attention and brought China's
Chunyun, or Spring Festival transportation, into the spotlight
again.
The death occurred on Jan. 13 when Leng Jing, a junior student
from Anhui Normal University, was waiting with more than 600 other
passengers.
Passengers flooded on to the platform before the train had
stopped and Leng was pushed beneath on to the tracks.
A huge rise in passengers, particularly among college students
and migrants, forms the Spring Festival transport boom as they make
their way home and then return within a 40-day period. Train
tickets are particularly difficult to purchase during the peak
passenger flow.
The Chunyun migration is the subject of heated public discussion
each year. China started its Chunyun on Friday amid widespread
concern.
The railways are expected to carry a record 178.6 million
passengers during the 40 days, up from 156 million last year,
according to China's Ministry of Railways.
(Xinhua News Agency January 22, 2008)