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Flying solo: Chinese woman only passenger on New Year flight
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Feb 3, 2016


Free upgrades for stranded Chinese travellers
Beijing (AFP) Feb 3, 2016 - Chinese rail authorities offered 10,000 stranded Lunar New Year travellers free upgrades to high-speed trains Wednesday as they tackled a huge backlog of passengers stuck in Guangzhou by snow and ice.

The city is the capital of the southern province of Guangdong, which as China's manufacturing powerhouse is a major hub for the vast numbers of migrant workers who leave their homes in the countryside to labour in factories.

Many only return home once a year, when tradition dictates that all family members must gather before midnight on the eve of the Lunar New Year which falls on February 8 this time.

The phenomenon puts huge pressure on the country's transport infrastructure and a big freeze in north and central China worsened the situation this year.

Vast numbers were held up at two stations in Guangzhou when their outbound trains were many hours late reaching the city, with the crowds peaking at nearly 100,000 people at one point on Monday, local police said.

Around 33,000 were still stranded at Guangzhou station by midday Wednesday, state broadcaster China Central Television said.

Rail authorities called up four high-speed trains from other areas to run extra services to destinations north of the city to reduce the crowds, the Guangzhou Railway (Group) Corporation said in a statement.

High-speed tickets are much more expensive than ordinary trains but the delayed travellers would not be charged the difference, it said. Nearly 10,000 would benefit.

The Chinese government estimates that 2.91 billion trips will be taken over the holiday's 40-day travel season, in what is thought to be the largest yearly movement of people in the world.

A Chinese woman heading home for the holidays had a commercial airline flight all to herself after gruelling delays winnowed down other passengers.

As nearly 100,000 people found themselves stranded at train stations in Guangzhou on Monday trying to leave, the woman, surnamed Zhang, documented her unique trip to the city on social media.

She posted photos showing row after row of empty seats on the China Southern plane as it flew from Wuhan.

The flight was delayed for 10 hours, and other passengers departed on earlier flights, leaving Zhang to enjoy personalised attention from the plane's crew.

The experience was "tuhao", she said on her social media feed, using a slang term for the nouveau riche.

China Southern schedules show the flight is normally operated using a Boeing 737-700 aircraft, which generally seats 137 passengers.

Statistics on website Flightradar24 show that a China Southern flight from Wuhan to Guangzhou on Monday was due to leave at 0640 GMT, but did not do until 1639 GMT.

The huge movement of Chinese travelling home to spend the Lunar New Year with their families is often described as the world's largest human migration and overcrowded planes, trains and automobiles are the norm.

Many on social media envied Zhang's good luck in avoiding the enormous crowds.

"What a fluke that you went against the big New Year's current", one comment said, noting that the plane will be completely full on its flight back from Guangzhou, a prosperous city that attracts many economic migrants.

Over the last several days, tens of thousands have been stranded at the city's trains stations due to weather conditions.

But one commenter saw the glass half-empty: "Even under these conditions, they still didn't upgrade you?"


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