Traffic slowly restoring in disaster-hit south China, thousands still stranded

2008-01-30 02:32:16 Xinhua English

Soldiers clear away ice on a bridge of the highway linking Shanghai and Kunming, in east China's Jiangxi Province, Jan. 30. 2008. Soldiers, policemen and militia in Jiangxi worked together to fight against the disastrous snow recently. (Xinhua Photo/Zhou Yonggan)

The stranded trucks wait to move on the snow-covered Beijing-Zhuhai expressway in central China's Hunan Province, Jan. 30, 2008. Local governments and departments in Hunan have done their best to clean up snow in order to resume the traffic of the expressway as soon as possible.(Xinhua Photo/Long Hongtao)

Buses drive out in a long-distance coach station in west Changsha, capital of central China's Hunan Province, Jan. 30, 2008. Three long-distance coach stations in Changsha resumed most lines Thursday as the weather was momently better. (Xinhua Photo/Long Hongtao)

BEIJING, Jan. 30 (Xinhua) -- Traffic is slowly getting better in southern Chinese provinces hit by the worst winter weather in five decades. Thousands of passengers, however, are still trapped on icy highways, the Ministry of Public Security said Wednesday.

"The situation is improving based on information sent from the provinces," said ministry spokesman Wu Heping at a press conference. "One of the key tasks now is to reopen the expressway linking Beijing with Zhuhai City in the southern Guangdong Province."

The north-south trunk road remained blocked at several sections.

The expressway section running through the central Hunan Province has 116 km of frozen road and vehicles are moving at a speed of five km an hour, Wu said.

"So far, about 6,400 vehicles with more than 10,000 passengers are still on the road," he said.

The whole of Hunan has been gearing up to restore traffic. More than 100,000 soldiers and armed policemen, 20,000 government officials, 7,000 police, 2,400 transport officials and 40,000 citizens are working to de-ice the expressway.

"But we shall prepare for tougher situations as the weather forecast says it will continue raining and snowing for the next seven days in Hunan," Wu said.

The expressway section in Hubei Province north to Hunan has witnessed about 5,000 vehicles moving slowly over a distance of 25km.

Meanwhile, the expressway in Guangdong south to Hunan has about a 20-km stretch of frozen surface. Vehicles heading south on the expressway have begun moving forward at a snail's pace while the lanes heading north remain closed. They are expected to reopen on Wednesday.

Along the highway linking the eastern Anhui Province with neighboring Zhejiang Province, about 6,000 vehicles are still trapped with more than 20,000 people, Wu said.

In the eastern Jiangxi Province, about 8,000 vehicles and 20,000 people are stranded along the highway linking its two major cities, Nanchang and Jiujiang.

Traffic in the southern Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region has been totally restored, Wu said.

Unexpected freezing weather, heavy snow, sleet and ice rain has hit 14 provinces in central and south China in the past week. More than 77.8 million people had been affected by Monday afternoon, according to the Ministry of Civil Affairs.