China is waging all-out war against the disasters caused by
heavy snow and rain in the southern provinces, with military forces
and police officers getting involved.
Top state leaders are also supervising disaster relief work.
President Hu Jintao chaired a meeting of the Political
Bureau of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China
(CPC) in Beijing on Tuesday to study the damage inflicted by icy
rain and heavy snow and plan future work.
The politbureau urged local authorities to regard disaster
relief as the "most pressing task" and make "all-out efforts" to
ensure normal production and life in areas hit by the extreme
weather in the past half month.
Premier Wen Jiabao rushed to Hunan to help with
disaster relief work following an unprecedented snowfall. He
promised passengers stranded in the railway station in Changsha,
capital of the province, that they would all be home for the Spring
Festival. (Video: Premier Wen rushes
to Hunan for disaster relief work )
Premier Wen Jiabao (C) talks to the
stranded passengers in a coach on the Beijing-Zhuhai expressway
near Xiangtan City of central China's Hunan Province, on Jan. 29,
2008.
The Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Youth League
(CCYL) issued an emergency circular, urging local CCYL
organizations at different levels to do everything possible to help
areas affected by heavy snow over upcoming weeks.
The circular urged members of the All-China Federation of Youth,
young entrepreneurs and young rich people in rural areas to
contribute money and goods to the affected areas.
Staffs clean snow on a railway bridge in
east China's Jiangxi Province Jan. 29, 2008. Local authorities took
efforts in combating snow-inflicted disasters and reducing the
negative impact to the least extent as volatile weather continued
to rage the region.
The People's Liberation Army (PLA)'s Department of General Staff
and General Political Department issued a joint circular on Monday,
ordering troops in affected areas to join the anti-snow battle in
collaboration with local governments.
So far, 158,000 PLA troops and the Chinese People's Armed Police
(PAP) and 303,000 paramilitary members have joined the anti-snow
campaign.
Nearly 1 million police have been dispatched to keep traffic in
order on China's congested highways and bridges since heavy snow
hit the country earlier this month.
Traffic policemen help vehicles pass the
toll station of Bantangdao Entry of the reopened Hefei-Chaohu-Wuhu
Expressway, Chaohu, east China's Anhui Province, Jan. 29, 2008.
Over 2,000 vehicles were suspended in Chaohu due to the heavy snow
in the past few days.
So far, the ministry has allocated 4.6 million yuan (639,000
U.S. dollars) to Guizhou, Anhui, Hunan, Henan, Hubei, Jiangxi and
Guangdong Provinces to subsidize the police working in the front
line.
The Ministry of Civil Affairs and Ministry of Finance on Tuesday
allocated 98 million yuan to four rain- and snow-hit areas.
Two workers of Huaibei power company
inspect the transformer substations in Huaibei, east China's Anhui
Province, Jan. 29, 2008. The power company pressed the monitoring
and inspection on power lines and transformer substations to ensure
the power supplies in order. An unprecedented snowstorm has
affected large parts of China including Anhui, Jiangxi, Guangdong,
Hunan, Hubei and Shanghai.
The aid was given to Anhui, Jiangxi and Guizhou Provinces and
Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, according to the ministries.
At present, the two ministries have provided 126 million yuan in
aid to six provinces and an autonomous region hit hard by icy rain
and heavy snow.
Heavy snow had killed 24 people and affected 77.86 million
people in 14 provinces, including Anhui, Jiangxi, Hubei and Hunan,
by 2 p.m. on Monday.The China Meteorological Administration issued
a red alert earlier that day for severe snowstorms in the central
and eastern parts of the country.
Winter storm to continue:
forecaster
China issues red alert for
snowstorms
Brutal weather takes rising toll
Heavy snow piles on the
agony
Pre-holiday travel peak at
standstill
Gov't urges conservation to ease winter
power disruption
(Xinhua News Agency January 30, 2008)