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Cold snap hits east Asia, blamed for more than 65 deaths

A woman uses a smartphone to take a souvenir photo of the trees covered with ice at a resort in Hangzhou in east China's Zhejiang province, Monday

Ralph Jennings and Louise Watt (The Jakarta Post)
Taipei
Mon, January 25, 2016 Published on Jan. 25, 2016 Published on 2016-01-25T19:26:57+07:00

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A woman uses a smartphone to take a souvenir photo of the trees covered with ice at a resort in Hangzhou in east China's Zhejiang province, Monday. (Chinatopix via AP) A woman uses a smartphone to take a souvenir photo of the trees covered with ice at a resort in Hangzhou in east China's Zhejiang province, Monday. (Chinatopix via AP) (Chinatopix via AP)

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span class="caption">A woman uses a smartphone to take a souvenir photo of the trees covered with ice at a resort in Hangzhou in east China's Zhejiang province, Monday. (Chinatopix via AP)

Unusually cold weather in eastern Asia has been blamed for more than 65 deaths, disrupted transportation and brought the first snow to a subtropical city in southern China in almost 50 years. Here is a look at the worst cold weather to hit the region in years:

TAIWAN

Temperatures in Taiwan's capital of Taipei plunged to a 16-year low of 4 degrees Celsius, killing 57 mostly elderly people, according to government officials. The semi-official Focus Taiwan news website reported that 85 people had died because of the cold.

Most homes in subtropical Taiwan lack central heating, and the cold caused heart trouble and breathing problems for many of the victims, a city official said. Normally, temperatures in Taipei hover around 16 degrees C in January, according to Taiwan's Central Weather Bureau.

The cold snap was blamed in the deaths of 40 people in the capital, Taipei, and 17 in neighboring New Taipei City. The cold front also left 9 centimeters of snow on Taipei's highest peak.

JAPAN

Heavy snow in western and central Japan left five people dead over the weekend and possibly a sixth on Monday.

Kyodo News service said the victims included a woman who fell from a roof while removing snow, a man in a weather-related traffic accident, another man found under a snowplow and a couple that fell into an irrigation channel, apparently while removing snow.

An 88-year-old woman in western Japan's Tottori prefecture died after a landslide hit her house before dawn on Monday, Kyodo and other media reported.

The heavy snow stranded motorists, delayed bullet train service and caused flight cancellations.

MAINLAND CHINA

Most parts of mainland China experienced their coldest weather in decades over the weekend. The southern city of Guangzhou, which has a humid subtropical climate, saw snow for the first time since 1967 on Sunday.

The cold led to at least four deaths '€” strawberry farmers who died of carbon monoxide poisoning when they turned up the heat in a greenhouse, the Xinhua News Agency reported.

The cold spell coincided with the beginning of the 40-day travel rush for the Lunar New Year, which is on Feb. 8 this year, disrupting cars, flights and trains. More than 11,000 passengers were stranded at Kunming airport in southern Yunnan province.

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