Joint patrol teams keep Mekong safe
Noisy business
Yan Yizhang, from Xishuangbanna, has worked in the small, muggy engine room of a patrol vessel for 10 years. Every time the boat departs on a mission, the machinery creates a din, forcing him to concentrate hard to detect any problems.
He said he seldom contacts his family during a patrol, as he needs to watch the engine and respond to emergencies quickly. He even sleeps in the engine room, and also knows the locations of rapids and rocks in the river.
Returning from a patrol in January 2015, one of the engines broke down, and there was a risk of the vessel overturning as it battled a fierce current. Yan immediately told his colleagues to make for the shore. Despite toiling in high temperatures, nine workers fixed the problem in six hours.
Four years earlier, during another mission, a Laotian patrol boat was holed after hitting a reef, with water engulfing the engine room. Yan and his team quickly repaired the damage, and there were no deaths or injuries. He was awarded a second-class merit for his actions.
- Whole roasted lamb lands Chongqing restaurant in trouble
- Early land plants reshaped Earth 30m yrs earlier than thought, study finds
- Shanghai records double-digit consumption growth during the Chinese New Year
- China Railway Guangzhou Group transports over 50m passengers since the start of travel rush
- Holiday records a new high in tourist trips and tourism-related spending
- Tap to hear Spring Festival traditions in Shandong
































