Cold front brings misery to north, central regions

Published: 21/01/2011 05:00

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The prolonged and damaging cold
spell has attacked the northern and central regions, deeply disrupting the daily
life of the local people.


People in northern Lao Cai Province’s Sa Pa Town are selling
dead livestock that have died through the prolonged cold spell. Icy weather has
brought misery to people, livestocks and crops. (Photo: VNS)

As many as seven deaths were reported due
to cold weather or carbon monoxide poisoning from coal braziers in the central
provinces of Quang Nam, Quang Tri and Phu Yen.


The incidence of cold-related diseases rose
15 per cent nation-wide, said Luong Ngoc Khue, director of the Ministry of
Health’s Health Examination and Treatment Department.


“Almost all of the patients are children or
the elderly hospitalised with symptoms of respiratory disease,” Khue said.


Health experts have advised people of the
risks of carbon monoxide exposure and have also warned parents not carry their
children by motorbike in the cold weather. Statistics from the Livestock
Breeding Department under the Ministry
of Agriculture and Rural
Development show that the prolonged cold weather has killed over 17,000 cows and
buffaloes mainly in the northern provinces of Son La, Lao Cai, Lai Chau and Cao
Bang.


In addition, peach and kumquat trees are
unlikely to be able to bloom during Tet due to the freezing temperatures.


Fishermen missing


Prolonged icy weather, together with rough
seas and gusting winds, has prevented hundreds of offshore fishing vessels from
returning to the mainland.


Nguyen Van Huynh, a representative from
Quang Ngai Province’s Border Guard, said that more than 100 fishing vessels from
Binh Son District and Ly Son Island District were forced to shelter at islands
offshore.


Pham Nhanh, a fishing vessel captain from
Binh Son District’s Binh Chau Commune, said that his boat had managed to make it
home, but that many others, laden with between seven and 15 tonnes of fish, were
waiting for better weather near Hoang Sa and Truong Sa islands.


Nhanh said it took at least six days for
fishing boats to go from Truong Sa Islands and five days from Hoang Sa Islands
to local ports.


About 380 fishing vessels in Quang Nam
Province’s Tam Quang Commune and hundreds of others in Da Nang faced the same
situation.


Head of the Tho Quang Port’s Fishing Vessel
Management Board Huynh Van Phuong said about 200-300 fishing boats either
sheltered or anchored at the city’s port, while about ten boats went offshore
each day.


The bitter cold spell is forecast to affect
the central region today, bringing heavy rain, rough seas and gusting winds of
between 61 and 102kph.


Last week, a fishing boat from Thanh Hoa
Province carrying nine fishermen and another from Hai Phong carrying five
fishermen went missing.


Rescue units are still searching for the
boats and fishermen.

VietNamNet/Viet
Nam News

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