Tuesday, March 30, 2004
By Reuters
BEIJING — One of the worst dust storms to hit northern China in
years swirled into Beijing on Monday, turning the skyline of the
sprawling capital into a monochrome of gray and prompting afternoon
commuters to put on surgical masks.
Visibility in parts of north China was cut to 10 m (33 feet) over
the weekend, the China Daily said on its Web site, complicating
relief efforts after an earthquake last week in Inner Mongolia.
"Thus far, 80 percent of the 1,500 tents put up after the
earthquake have been destroyed, leaving some 10,000 earthquake victims
in the open air waiting once again for help," it said.
"When the wind came, the sky turned from blue to red and then
black in the afternoon," a resident of Inner Mongolia was quoted
as saying on the Web site, which described the storm as the worst
in years.
An earthquake registering 5.9 on the Richter scale rocked the north
on Wednesday, but no immediate casualties were reported.
Dust storms that hit Beijing every spring are blamed on winds whipping
up the sands of increasingly dry northwestern regions, where reforestation
projects have yet to rein in erosion and desertification.
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