Beijing's 22 million residents were asked to keep closed on Saturday, because strong winds were swept in the north north. The winds knocked down the trees, broke their journey and sport and caused the dust storms in the region.
The Saturday afternoon, the winds that reach 101 miles in the hour from local time stem from A Polar Vortex Sent the temperature in Mongolia or Chinese state news media.
Wind and rain began to hit the area on Friday. Saturday afternoon, more than 800 trees were demolished and about 7,000 people were evacuated in Beijing.
In one night, Saturday morning, dust storms, in the northern country, including Pek, the state broadcaster is China Central Television.
Yang Bobo, who is a postgraduate graduate in Beijing, said Gale's Gale “like dreams like dreams and wolves” “he took a glass door in the wind, he said.
“I didn't go out since I valued my life last night,” he said. Yang said via text messages on Saturday.
The winds of the windows in Beijing and the windows of the central China in the Henan province of Henan, according to videos shared on the social media platform, sang damage poles and windows in China's Henan province.
The city authorities in Beijing recommended not to travel inadequate to the residents and postpone the football matches scheduled for the weekend. City transport officials have been suspended on Friday and Saturday and Saturday and bus services were suspended on Saturday and thousands of flights were canceled on Saturday.
Tourist places, including the prohibited city, spring palace and a popular part of the Great Wall, were closed. Sunday was a marathon planned in Beijing postponed up to next week.
After a line of 80 degrees in the city, the temperature was predicted to reach 57 Fahrenheit on Saturday. Strong winds for nearby Shanxi and Hebei provinces and China's inner mongol region were predicted.
Meteorologists in South Korea and Japan also left strong wind warnings along the western shores of countries on Saturday. The winds there were associated with the same weather system affecting China, Woo Jin-Gyu, said an officer with the Korean Meteorological Department.