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S.Korea mobilises civil servants, soldiers to clear snow

by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Jan 5, 2010
South Korea mobilised tens of thousands of civil servants and soldiers Tuesday to clear record snowfalls as freezing temperatures left roads and highways icy in many areas.

Weathermen said snow stopped falling late Monday in Seoul and nearby areas but the southwest coast received up to 21 centimetres (8.27 inches) of snow between late Monday and early Tuesday.

Almost 28 centimetres of snow fell in Seoul on Monday, the heaviest reported in the country since records began in 1937, according to the Korea Meteorological Administration.

A man in his 50s fell to his death from the roof of a badminton court in Seoul while trying to clear snow on Monday, Yonhap news agency said.

In the central city of Cheongju, some 3,000 chickens perished as their coops collapsed under the weight of snow, it said.

In Seoul alone, about 48,000 people including civil servants and volunteers were mobilised to remove snow.

The defence ministry said 19,000 solders were deployed for snow clearing nationwide, as military helicopters carried blankets and food to isolated villages.

Cars crawled along icy roads as temperatures plunged to minus 10.4 degrees Celsius (14 degrees Fahrenheit) in Seoul and minus 20.4 in Cheolwon, 58 kilometres (35 miles) northwest of the capital.

A day after heavy snowfalls grounded many flights, service on international routes returned to normal Tuesday, but domestic air traffic and railway transportation remained crippled in some areas.

Thousands of fishing boats had to take shelter at ports along the southwest coast.

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Record snow brings travel misery in China, South Korea
Beijing (AFP) Jan 4, 2010
Planes were grounded and thousands of schools were forced to close as the heaviest snow in over six decades blanketed Beijing and Seoul on Monday, with temperatures plummeting across much of Asia. One person was killed and at least two others were missing in the mountains of central Japan after heavy snow. With temperatures falling in several Asian countries, Indian officials said over 4 ... read more







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