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Worst sandstorm in a decade sweeps across China

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BEIJING — North China and the country’s capital city were blanketed in thick bands of dust Monday caused by the worst sandstorm to engulf the area in more than a decade.

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Hundreds of flights at Beijing’s two airports were canceled, traffic was snarled and skyscrapers dropped from view because of low visibility caused by high winds filled with sand from a storm emanating from the Gobi Desert in the Inner Mongolia Region, The Associated Press reported.

The sandstorms reportedly caused six deaths and the disappearances of dozens of other people in Mongolia, the BBC reported.

Outdoor events at schools were canceled and people with respiratory issues were urged to stay inside, AFP reported. Residents used goggles, masks and hairnets to withstand the thick yellow smog.

“This is the most intense sandstorm weather our country has seen in 10 years, as well as it covering the broadest area,” the National Meteorological Center said on social media.

The agency forecast the storm to affect 12 provinces, including Xinjiang in the northwest, Heilongjiang in the northeast and Tianjin on the eastern coast.

The storms were a regular occurrence during spring. Sand would blow as far as northern Japan. Tree planting and other reforestation efforts have reduced the storms in some parts of the country, but industrial expansion, including strip mining and overgrazing, continues to help fuel them.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.


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