Monday, January 5, 2009

Millions are homeward bound early















Thousands of people queue in front of

temporary counters at an exhibition center in Ningbo, Zhejiang province,on

Sunday, to buy train tickets. (Photo: Chinadaily.com.cn)
Photo Gallery



BEIJING, Jan. 5 -- Railway stations across the country

have been encountering an early travel rush as thousands of migrant workers

return home for Spring Festival holiday.

The Ministry of Railways last month estimated that

this year, the railways would carry a record 188 million passengers - 8 percent

more than last year - across the country during Spring Festival season. Although

the official holiday is 3 weeks away, millions are heading home early because

many have lost their jobs as a result of the financial crisis.

In the 3-day New Year holiday alone, more than

520,000 people boarded trains at the Beijing railway station. This, according to

statistics, is 20 percent more than last year.

"In the upcoming travel season, more than 180,000

people will leave the Beijing railway station every day," Cai Yanmei, an

official at the station, said.

Beijing railway officials expect the crowds to surge

after Jan 20.

"We will face more pressure this year because migrant

workers, college students and other passengers will get home in less than a

month," Jiang Lin, a press official at Beijing railways bureau said yesterday.

Jiang said the bureau is preparing for the crowds by

opening more ticket offices and scheduling additional trains. The government

also advanced special railway services for Spring Festival for 10 days, he said.



In Shanghai, nearly 30,000 people lined up at railway

stations to buy tickets last Thursday - the first day that people could buy

tickets for departures on January 11, the start of the peak travel season.

Among the thousands were 43-year-old Liu Xiaofu and

his friend, both from Sichuan province. The two slept on the square in front of

the station on New Year's Eve so they could be among the first ones in the queue

to buy tickets to Chengdu, Sichuan province.

"Tickets were sold out in half an hour after the

windows opened," Liu told China Daily.

Apart from Sichuan, tickets to Jiangxi and Hunan

provinces are in demand, a source at the Shanghai railway station said.

To maintain order, railway police officers give

passengers token numbers and assign them to different queues. Armed police and

security officers have also been deployed to maintain order at ticketing areas

and prevent accidents.

(Source: China Daily)

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