China Daily

Record cold strands thousands

Temperatur­e drops to -52 C in Xinjiang, road, railway and air traffic badly hit

- By ZOU SHUO in Changsha, MAO WEIHUA in Urumqi and MA JINGNA in Lanzhou Contact the writers at zoushuo@chinadaily.com.cn

Local authoritie­s in Gansu have rescued 43,000 travelers stranded on various highways in the province while on their way to Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region following heavy snowfall and windstorms over the weekend.

Hotels and restaurant­s in Mazongshan town in Gansu have opened their doors to stranded travelers. The town is located on the highway linking Xinjiang and Gansu. Local authoritie­s have also made government offices and public facilities available for the travelers, offering them a place to sleep, hot water and food.

Authoritie­s in Guazhou county in Gansu have readied gymnasiums, hotels and school dormitorie­s to shelter those stranded on the road. A total of 18,000 travelers were sheltering in the county as of Saturday night.

Meanwhile, ordinary people have also come forward to help those affected by the inclement weather.

Wang Yang, a resident of Guazhou, was hosting 11 travelers at his home on Saturday. “As all hotel rooms are full, I am willing to help anyone in need and contribute in any way,” he said. “They are all friends from different places and we are ready to help in any way we can.”

Feng Dongjiao, a tourist from Xinjiang who was stranded in Dunhuang, Gansu province, said that after being exposed to the bad weather on the highway for a long time, she was showing signs of hypoglycem­ia when she arrived at a hotel in the city. The hotel staff immediatel­y gave her fruits, a gesture that touched her deeply.

As temperatur­es in Xinjiang plunged to a record-breaking -52.3 C on Sunday, temporary traffic controls were enforced on some snowhit highways, while many flights and trains were canceled due to the extreme weather.

Most parts of Xinjiang also experience­d strong winds and sandstorms, leading to low visibility.

According to the Xinjiang Meteorolog­ical Center, 31 stations in the region recorded heavy snowfall from Friday to Saturday. The region also experience­d extreme temperatur­e drops, with average temperatur­es hovering between -39 C and -28 C in southern Xinjiang and -32 C and -16 C in northern Xinjiang over the weekend. The lowest temperatur­e was recorded in Fuyun county of Altay prefecture at -52.3 C on Sunday, breaking the record of -51.5 C set on Jan 21, 1960.

In Xinjiang, extreme weather halted 99 trains between Friday and Sunday, while 35 flights were canceled as of 11 am on Sunday. With traffic in Xinjiang partly suspended, many travelers became stranded in neighborin­g Gansu province.

Meanwhile, the National Meteorolog­ical Center issued an orange alert for cold wave, forecastin­g temperatur­e drops of 8 degrees to 12 degrees in most parts of the country from Sunday through Thursday.

Parts of Inner Mongolia autonomous region, Northeast China, and Hubei and Hunan provinces could see temperatur­es plunge by more than 20 degrees.

The country has a four-tier, colorcoded weather warning system for cold waves, with red representi­ng the most severe weather, followed by orange, yellow and blue.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Passengers crowd a railway station in Urumqi, Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, on Saturday. Many trains and flights in the region were delayed or canceled over the weekend due to heavy snow.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Passengers crowd a railway station in Urumqi, Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, on Saturday. Many trains and flights in the region were delayed or canceled over the weekend due to heavy snow.

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