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January 2008

January 31, 2008

The Continuing Saga in Southern China

Early this morning, I hopped in the car and headed north on a work related trip.  My driver told me it might take longer than usual, as the highway we were getting on was the only highway headed north that remained open to traffic.  The usual 3 hr trip, might take 4...just what I wanted to hear. 

There were definitely more cars and trucks on the road than usual, but nothing that slowed us down.  We arrived about 15 minutes later than usual...so I count myself lucky.  Once up there (near Heyuan), the temperatures were decidedly lower, with a biting wind coming from the north.  We estimated the temps to be around 4C...and with the wind, it was easily 1C or 2C. 

The situation in Guangzhou, has either gotten worse, or it has gotten better.  Glowing reports from the local media paint the picture a bit rosier than what I suspect...

Today Guangzhou Railway Station is getting back to normal and 98 trains will start off, with some 200,000 passengers on their journey. It is estimated that all the 600,000 passengers stranded in Guangzhou will all be able to get on their way back home in 3 days.

Indeed...as they say, people will be able to get on their way in 3 days...that would be Sunday.  This all started last Sunday...so people would have been stranded one week.  Now, that could either be rosy...or it could be silly.

Australian television showed video of people jostling and fighting for queue rights and trampling barracades, while police pleaded with people on bullhorns to 'remain calm.'   And there was this from their website...

State television has described the hardships, but reportedly stresses stories of tireless railway workers, police and officials and the six electricity workers who died while repairing power lines.

Live-to-air updates on relief efforts have also featured an uplifting song, with the lines "We all belong to one family, a loving family".

And Fox News reports this...

One desperate mob stormed a city bus in the main southern city of Guangzhou, mistakenly thinking it was taking passengers to the day's last departing trains. They pried open doors and elbowed their way inside as helpless police yelled, "It's not going to the station!"

I don't want to say 'I told you so'...but, this is what I fear.  What happens when they start loading up people in three days...after they have already been there for a week?  The scenes on Australian television were eerily what I suspected would happen; crushing of crowds, trampling...chaos.  The feelings are starting to come out in the newspapers, slowly (such as the man above).  Frustrations will mount, and criticism of the handling of this will be loud.  You only need to watch the television when they show a line of PLA soldiers with shovels, scooping snow off the roadway.  Uhhh...why don't you have a plow or grater for that??  Because, they are completely unprepared.  Thousands of miles of roads and railways impassible due to snow...and they hire a load of soldiers to scoop snow with shovels.  It's the Chinese way.

From our office, I received an email asking employees to volunteer clothing, blankets, food, money or time to assist those stranded at the train station.  The Chinese are not the most 'samaritan' of people, so it will be interesting to see what the response is to Guangzhou's time of need during this special time of the year.

Finally, when traveling back from the north, we stopped at a truck stop for a quick bio-break.  As we pulled into our stop and the driver headed for the facilities, I stepped out to check out what was going on around us...and where the trucks were parked were piles of snow, which had fallen off the parked trucks that had just come from the north.  When my driver came back, I flagged him down and showed him the snow...
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It was the first time in his life, he had ever seen it.  Pretty cool...
               

links for 2008-01-31

January 30, 2008

GZ Train Station Closure Continues

Well, during my busy work day, I decided to take a side trip to the office and see if I couldn't see for myself what was going on around the train station.  The day was cold (6C) with a downpour of cold rain all day long.  So, we drove through the city and up on to the Ring Road, which encircles GZ and runs right past the station.  My driver told me that there was no way we could drive down below, so we would just pass by.  Unfortunately, there is a hedge along the divider and I couldn't get a good view of the station square...so I just held up my camera and snapped pictures.  This was the only shot that turned out...

Picture_147

Not satisfied with that, I asked if we could somehow get over towards the China Hotel, which is located about 1KM from the station, and directly across from the Trade Fair center, in which the government opened up to some of the stranded yesterday.  My driver said, we could get to the hotel...and I could get out and walk around a bit.

Continue reading "GZ Train Station Closure Continues" »

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January 29, 2008

GZ Train Station Still Closed; 1/2 Million Stranded.

The situation at the rail station continues to deteriorate.

China's most important railway, Jing-guang Railway (Guangzhou-Beijing), cannot reopen to traffic for 3 to 5 days, due to the power supply cut in Hunan Province and the aggravated snowy weather in the regions along the line, according to the Guangzhou Railway Group. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has gone to Hunan to inspect and oversea the situation.

 

Some 500,000 people have been condemned to waiting in Guangzhou for their trains. Passenger accomodation sites in the city are in good order and there are no crowds seeking refunds.

As time goes on for these people, money is bound to run out for food and water.  The inevitable result is petty crime, pick-pocketing and the like.  Many of the people at the station have probably quit their jobs in order to return home...so they would be carrying with them their life's possessions too.  Others, take the only chance they have away from their jobs to vacation and visit family.  Top it off...it's cold...and it continues to be cold.  If the trains are indeed going to be closed up through the weekend (when most people will be traveling), this could turn ugly, before it gets better.  Especially when you read this...

Guangzhou Railway Group has stopped selling tickets and opened all services to refund tickets yesterday.

Chinese New Year is THE time of year for families to unite, feast and generally feel good together.  It is the Christmas of China...this is their time.  Having millions of travelers heading home for the holidays stranded is not good for the government.  The rumors are already starting to fly about why the power has been shut down (coal prices are set too low by the government and providers are shutting down, rather than lose money) and those rumors are bound to inflame among the crowds. 

I dunno...if I were among the crowds, I'd be pissed.

UPDATE:  A friend helped point out a particular obstacle as the government 'springs' to action...

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has gone to Hunan to inspect and oversea the situation.

OK...so, did anyone tell the Premier of this??

Airports in Hunan and eastern Jiangsu, Anhui and Jiangxi provinces as well as expressways have been closed.

So...the trains, planes and automobiles cannot access Hunan province...but, the Premier can.  The long march makes a comeback! 

Pack warmly.

 


 

Stop Spitting

Hat Tip:  Danwei

links for 2008-01-29

January 28, 2008

It's Friggin' Cold

The weather here in GZ has been nothing short of cold.  At home, this is nothing, and we are all used to it.  A little snow always brings roads to a crawl in Oregon...but everyone has a hat, gloves and a decent coat to protect against the chill.  They just aren't used to it down here, with homes made of stone and no heating for the most part (luckily, we have it in our house and office)

More than 150,000 people were stranded at the main railway station in Guangzhou, the capital of the booming southern province of Guangdong, on Sunday.120140592633445_2_2

"A Guangzhou railway official warned that the number of stranded passengers could hit 600,000 today," the China Daily said.

"Last night, 100,000 passengers packed the square in front of the railway station; another 50,000 found shelter inside the building or under nearby flyovers," an official in Guangzhou, which enjoys a relatively warm winter, was quoted as saying.

(photo from:  Life of Guangzhou/Guangzhou Daily)

The last time this happened was in 1998...shortly after expat son was born.  The house we had moved into at the time had no heat.  The palatial 'villa' was built of stone and had stone floors which were placed directly on the ground.  It was usually colder inside the house than outside.  Tai-Tai would huddle new-born expat son and expat daughter into the kitchen, close the door and fire up the burners and oven in an attempt to stay warm during the day.  We were lucky...many hundreds weren't as there were many deaths from the cold around the area

Word around here is they will soon be opening some of the Trade Fair venue's to take in the stranded.  But, think about it...more than 1/2 million stranded.  Think of the times the airport has closed and how people freak out that they cannot get their flight, etc...they are usually one of maybe a thousand...multiply it by 600%!  Insane. 

We're getting set to get out of here for Chinese New Year and there are problems at the airport too with stranded people.  Hopefully, we'll get through without too much hassle...which we should.  We have two things going for us; we're heading to Thailand and we have business class tickets.  Sometimes, it pays to spend a little extra...and this is one of those times.

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links for 2008-01-28

Taiwan Hockey Mourns

I never knew Matt Stever, but our lives crossed.  Last year, I attended the HK 5's ice hockey tournament and watched the championship game between Hong Kong and Taiwan.  I really didn't know any of the players, but I had my camera and I snapped picture after picture and posted about what a great time it was watching hockey in Hong Kong.

And then I saw the news this morning...and decided to head back to those photos and see if there is anything there worth noting.  And I found one photo...of a player all by himself with the puck.  The light from the windows casting shadows in front...a photo I skipped past before, because the back lighting made the face incredibly dark.   But, with a little photoshop work...

Imgp2294_edited1_2

RIP

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