Saturday, February 2, 2008

306,000 soldiers mobilized to combat snow disasters

Special Report: China's war on snow havoc


Rescue materials are ready to be loaded to aerotransport at an airport in Changzhi, north China's Shanxi Province, Feb. 1, 2008. A mass of rescue materials including overcoats and bedquilts had been transported to snow disaster area by air force transporters since Jan. 31.(Xinhua Photo/Yao Lin)

Photo Gallery>>>

BEIJING, Feb. 2 (Xinhua) -- As of midnight Friday, the People's Liberation Army (PLA) of China had deployed 306,000 soldiers to combat the effects of the snow in the southern parts of the country, a military source said.

About 1.07 million militia and army reservists were participating in the weather relief effort, the PLA's emergency response group told Xinhua.

The PLA currently has 2.3 million troops.

Irregular tactics, including shooting power lines with submachine guns to shatter the ice, and resorting to tanks to crush ice on the road, were used frequently by soldiers.

Military vehicles such as field kitchen trucks and armored cars played an important role in de-icing and rescue missions. More than 100 aircraft and helicopters remained on standby, air force sources said.

Two AN-26 transport planes flew to the southwestern province of Guizhou in the early hours of Saturday, carrying 5.5 tons of relief material and equipment including food, medicine and quilts.

By 1:33 p.m. on Saturday, the first of six helicopters loaded with relief goods, deployed by the Chengdu Military Area in southwest China, flew to Yibin, Sichuan Province. The copters were to airdrop 5,500 quilts over snow-hit areas in Dazhou and Yibin's Changning County, which on top of the snow was hit by a medium-intensity earthquake early on Friday.

In the southern city of Guangzhou, about 1,500 soldiers helped maintain order at the train station.

Soldiers of the Hubei Military Area in central China helped local police to restore a 28-km section of the Beijing-Zhuhai Expressway, the country's key north-south trunk road, which had been closed by dangerous icing. Those efforts helped more than 6,000 vehicles and 12,000 stranded riders continue their journeys.

Soldiers of Chinese People's Liberation Army load rescue materials on aerotransport at an airport in Changzhi, north China's Shanxi Province, Feb. 1, 2008. A mass of rescue materials including overcoats and bedquilts had been transported to snow disaster area by air force transporters since Jan. 31. (Xinhua Photo/Yao Lin)
Photo Gallery>>>

The snow, the heaviest in decades in many places, has been falling in China's eastern, central and southern regions for more than a fortnight. It has caused deaths, structural collapses, blackouts, accidents, transport problems and livestock and crop destruction.

"PLA headquarters and relevant military districts have had tanks and armored cars on standby and they can be put to use to break ice on the roads at the request of local governments," said Senior Colonel Tian Yixiang of the emergency response group.

"Whenever there is a disaster, the military is obliged to take part in the relief work," Tian said. "This is an obligation required by the Constitution and the laws. When manpower is needed, we send our men. When goods are needed, we offer our goods," he said.

Winter clothes and other disaster-relief stuff are boarded onto a jet plane of the Chinese air forces in Xianyang, Shaanxi Province, before they are transported to snowstorm-affected regions in Southwest China's Guizhou Province, Jan. 31, 2008.(Xinhua Photo)

Photo Gallery>>>


Related:

China National Grid: power to be resumed soon in worst-snow-hit area


Orange weather alert for weekend


Chinese soldiers battle snow disasters
China's snow havoc causes losses up to 53.8 bln yuan
China's war on snow havoc
China's air force flies winter reliefmaterials to snow-affected areas

State Council urges greater efforts to combat snow



No comments: