Accessibility links

Breaking News

Extreme Cold Weather in China Kills 21 in Ultramarathon

update

This May 22, 2021, photo shows rescuers carrying equipment as they search for runners who were competing in a 100-kilometer cross-country mountain race when extreme weather hit the area, leaving at least 21 dead, near the city of Baiyin, China.
This May 22, 2021, photo shows rescuers carrying equipment as they search for runners who were competing in a 100-kilometer cross-country mountain race when extreme weather hit the area, leaving at least 21 dead, near the city of Baiyin, China.

Twenty-one people were killed when extremely cold weather struck during an ultramarathon in rugged Gansu province in northwestern China, sparking public outrage Sunday over the lack of contingency planning.

The 100-kilometer (62-mile) race began Saturday from a scenic area at a bend in the Yellow River known for its sheer cliffs and rock columns. The route would take runners through canyons and hills on an arid plateau at an elevation of more than 1,000 meters (3,300 feet).

The race kicked off 9 a.m. (0100 GMT) with runners clad in T-shirts and shorts under overcast skies, according to photographs posted on the social media account of the Yellow River Stone Forest area in Jingtai, a county under the jurisdiction of Baiyin city.

Around noon on Saturday, a mountainous section of the race was hit by hail, freezing rain and gales that caused temperatures to plummet, officials from Baiyin told a news briefing Sunday.

"The rain was getting heavier and heavier," said Mao Shuzhi, who was about 24 km into the race at the time.

Shivering in the cold, she turned back before the high-altitude section because of previous experiences with hypothermia.

"At first I was a bit regretful, thinking it might have just been a passing shower, but when I saw the strong winds and rains later through my hotel room window, I felt so lucky that I made the decision," Mao told Reuters.

Massive rescue effort

A massive rescue effort was initiated, with more than 1,200 rescuers dispatched, assisted by thermal-imaging drones, radar detectors and demolition equipment, according to state media.

A landslide following the severe weather also hampered the rescue work, said officials from Baiyin, about 1,000 km (620 miles) west of the Chinese capital Beijing.

A total of 172 people took part in the race. By Sunday, 151 participants had been confirmed safe. A last missing runner was found dead at 9:30 a.m. Sunday, bringing the death toll to 21, state media reported.

Jingtai county recorded a low of 6 degrees Celsius (43 degrees Fahrenheit) on Saturday, not including wind chill.

Differing forecasts

Baiyin, including Jingtai, was expecting moderate to strong winds from Friday night through Saturday, according to the China Meteorological Administration in Beijing late Friday.

A separate report Thursday on the website of provincial weather services predicted a significant drop in temperature in most parts of Gansu, including Baiyin, through Sunday.

"It was very hot one day before the race, and although the weather forecast said there would be wind and moderate rain in Baiyin on Saturday, everybody believed it would be mild," Mao said. "It's dry in northwestern China."

No contingency plans

The deaths sparked public outrage on Chinese social media, with anger mainly directed at the Baiyin government over the lack of contingency planning.

"Why didn't the government read the weather forecast and do a risk assessment?" one commentator wrote. "This is totally a manmade calamity. Even if the weather is unexpected, where were the contingency plans?"

At the news briefing, Baiyin officials bowed and apologized, saying they were saddened by the tragic deaths of the runners and that they were to be blamed.

"The wind is too strong, our thermal blankets have been torn to bits," a runner wrote in a WeChat chatroom to which Mao belonged.

Many of the runners had suffered from hypothermia and had lost their way in the strong winds and heavy rain, according to screenshots taken by Mao of the messages in the chatroom.

The Gansu provincial government has set up an investigation team to further look into the cause of the deaths, the People's Daily reported.

  • 16x9 Image

    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

XS
SM
MD
LG