WUHAN/NANJING, Jan. 27 -- Snow continued to affect parts of China on Saturday, disrupting traffic and causing economic losses.
Eastern Jiangsu Province saw a maximum snowfall of 11.6 millimeters, with a snow depth of up to 11 centimeters as of 2 p.m., leading to a shortage of de-icing salt in Nanjing, the provincial capital.
Nearly 60 bus lines, over 1,000 long-distance coaches and 500 flights have been suspended or canceled. The Nanjing airport was temporarily closed.
Over 7,000 people in the neighboring Anhui Province were affected by the snowfall. Direct economic losses of 24.3 million yuan (3.8 million U.S. dollars), including over 18 million yuan of agricultural losses, were counted in three cities in Anhui.
In central China's Hunan Province, many highway sections were closed, or limited the number of passing vehicles due to snow and ice.
More than 670,000 people in central Hubei Province were affected by the snowfall that started Wednesday, with direct economic losses of more than 270 million yuan as a result of damaged homes and crops.
The provincial civil affairs department has allocated 124,000 yuan of fund for disaster relief and nearly 6,000 overcoats and quilts to affected residents.
According to the emergency center of Shiyan city, Hubei, a pregnant woman with intracranial tumor in a local hospital needed to be transferred to another hospital for emergency operation.
A police motorcade was dispatched to clear the traffic Saturday and a helicopter was used to transport the patient. The baby was born in the afternoon.
15 dead as train collides with taxi in India
New Zealand focuses on Eastern promise
Pandas show interest, but fail to mate at zoo
Taxis get subsidy to soften fuel hike blow
Fake monks busted by Buddhist students
Obama to stress security alliance in Seoul visit
British PM under pressure in selling access row
Obama vows to pursue nuclear cuts with Russia
New media a powerful tool, says poll
Obama hits back in Russia 'hot mic' row
US urged to stop meddling over Tibet
Obama, Lee warn DPRK rocket test
Satellite launch 'harmful'
First US Marines arrive in Australia
James Murdoch: 'I could have asked more questions'
Coca-Cola opens biggest bottling plant in China
Satellite fueled up for launch
School shooting suspect 'planned to kill' again
Half of cooked meat tested substandard
Blood-lead level testing resumed amid outcry
Sydney Harbour Bridge turns 80
Tougher penalties required against illegal food additives
China-New Zealand relationship 'best ever'
BBC TV teaches children yi, er, san
Man kills 4 outside French school
Iran mulls venues for nuclear talks
Students caught betting on sports
China gets serious about seatbelt use
Violent end for shooter
Synthetic drugs pose new challenge