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A
man holding an ice cast of a Chinese cabbage in Mairang
Village, Guiyang City, Guizhou Province, on January 28,
2008.
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A
father and son on a bicycle ride through heavy snow in Hangzhou,
Zhejiang Province, on February 1, 2008.
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In
Hunans Changsha, local drivers put green ribbons on
their cars, signaling a willingness to give free rides to
trapped children and old people.
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DURING a break between meetings on the train from Hunans
Changsha to Chenzhou on February 2, 2008, Xinhua News photographer
Yao Dawei took the opportunity to photograph Premier Wen Jiabao,
who was touring snow-hit southern China earlier this year. I
saw the Premier sitting motionless by the window, a cup of tea
on the table in front of him, recalls Yao. The train
was speeding across a territory of ice and snow, trees laden with
thick snow and ice cones, and now and then devastated iron transmission
towers in the distance jumped into view. The latest weather report
said that the sleet and snow would continue for several days across
a greater part of southern China. Premier Wen looked solemn, his
eyebrows knit and his eyes calm and resolute. His hands were cupped
in front of him, and his eyes conveyed tenacity and strength.
I was moved by his appearance, and snapped a shot.
Yao Dawei followed Premier Wen over the entire course of his
trip to the south. His image of Premier Wen in his compartment
now graces Facing the Cold, a photo album that records these events
by a range of amateur and professional photographers.
Beginning on January 10, southern China was hit by four spells
of sleet and snow over a period of nearly two months. The bad
weather paralyzed road and rail traffic, with more than 10,000
vehicles trapped for days on the Hunan section of the Beijing-Zhuhai
Expressway, and at least 136 trains delayed mid-journey. The number
of passengers stuck at Guangzhou Railway Station and passenger
terminals around the area increased by 100,000 a day during the
worst period.
The sleet and snow also brought down high-voltage power lines,
crippling the power grids of Guizhou, Hunan and Jiangxi, forcing
millions of people to live by candle light and kerosene stoves
for days or even weeks. In Hubei Province, 100,000 residents had
no access to drinking water for days, while in some mountainous
areas, supplying basic necessities like food, water and winter
clothing became a serious problem. The Chinese government dispatched
large numbers of troops and relief materials to the disaster-stricken
areas, and Premier Wen Jiabao made three trips to these areas
within nine days.
As a photographer, Yao Dawei said he was lucky to be part of
the Premiers entourage. I witnessed his deep concern,
saw him bowing tears in his eyes to the families
of the heroes who died fighting the snow, and doing his best to
console local residents despite his fatigue after days of traveling.
I also saw him climbing treacherous icy mountain slopes to extend
his personal regards to relief workers.
Yao Dawei recorded many of these scenes. Numerous other photographers
also recorded what happened around them during the natural disaster.
Many of their photos were published on Asianewsphoto.com. Wang
Wenlan, assistant to the editor-in-chief of China Daily and director
of Asianewsphoto.com, selected 222 photos by 133 photographers
in his role as chief editor of Facing the Cold.
A range of affecting moments have been immortalized in the albums
pages. There is President Hu Jintao at a relief material transport
site, and Premier Wens deep meditation in the face of devastation.
Power grid rescue workers can be seen swallowing ice and snow
to relieve their hunger and thirst. There are Chenzhou citizens
mourning three electricians who died while repairing the power
grid. There are ordinary people doing extraordinary things, like
carrying a sick passenger hand-over-hand atop a solid wall of
people to a safe place at the crammed Guangzhou Railway Station,
a wedding taking place on a trapped bus, and soldiers clearing
ice-encrusted roads. Finally, there are helpless truck drivers
stuck in immobilized traffic.
Though the album cannot present all of what went on, the
many small, touching incidents the photographers recorded can
realistically convey to people something of what happened this
past winter, says Wang Wenlan.
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