2008-11-03 09:28:00 View this news source: www.chinaview.cn
Herdsmen drive sheep in the snow in Lhunze county, southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, November 1, 2008. [Xinhua]
November 12, 2008
At least 144,400 yaks and sheep had died in what was reportedly the
worst snowstorm on record in Tibet
V iew source :Earth Times | Nov 2, 2008
Beijing - Rescuers continued efforts to reach dozens of people still
trapped after record snowfall blanketed a remote area of China’s Tibet
region, leaving at least nine dead, state media said on Sunday. Up to
2 metres of snow lay over some parts of Lhunze county, in Tibet’s Shannan
district, and could take another week to melt, the official Xinhua news
agency said. Soldiers and rescue workers had evacuated 1,892 people
in the Lhunzhe and Cuona counties and were trying to reach some 250
people still trapped, the agency said. Most of those who died had either
frozen to death or were hit by falling buildings brought down by the
weight of snow. Two people also went missing while they being evacuated,
earlier reports said. The regional government promised to pay subsidies
to herding families which had lost yaks and sheep as a result of the
snow. “It was the heaviest snow I have ever seen and the snowstorm was
totally unexpected,” Gaisang Yangzom, a village official in Lhunze,
told the agency. “Luckily, we just found our yak herd, but they didn’t
feed on anything for three days,” she was quoted as saying. Lhunze county
only had enough fodder for about 12 days and needed another 2,550 tons
of fodder for the animals and 325 tons of fuel for heating residents’
homes, the agency said. The China Daily newspaper said at least 144,400
yaks and sheep had died in what was reportedly the worst snowstorm on
record in Tibet, with 36 hours of continuous snowfall last Sunday and
Monday. Telecommunications and roads were badly affected in parts of
Shannan, while the heavy snow also affected mountainous areas of the
neighbouring provinces of Qinghai, Sichuan and Yunnan, it said. Those
rescued from remote areas were sleeping in schools or government buildings,
and officials had allocated tents, clothing and other emergency supplies,
the newspaper said. Cuona county had been cut off for three days but
the main road linking it to Lhunze reopened on Thursday after road workers
and paramilitary police battled for 63 hours to clear snow, it said.
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