Wednesday, November 29, 2006

China's Great Wall? "Just a pile of earth"

Reuters News

Tue Nov 28, 2006. BEIJING (Reuters) - Three people have been detained for digging up part of the Great Wall just days before strict new penalties are introduced to protect China's most famous tourist attraction, Xinhua news agency said.

The men used excavators to take earth from the remains of part of the Great Wall in Inner Mongolia, built at least 2,200 years ago, to use as landfill for a village factory.

"It's just a pile of earth," Erhaihao village head Hao Zengjun was quoted as telling officials from the Municipal Office on Cultural Relics Protection.

The Great Wall, which snakes its way across more than 4,000 miles, receives an estimated 10 million visitors a year, mostly to the tiny portion open to tourists at Badaling, the nearest stretch to Beijing.

The wall, which the United Nations listed as a World Heritage Site in 1987, has been rebuilt many times through the centuries, and many sections of it have suffered serious damage from weather erosion and human destruction.

Visitors climb wilder, crumblier sections that are not officially open to the public and stretches have become popular sites for summer raves.

Under the current law, those who damage key cultural relics deliberately can be sentenced to up to 10 years in prison.

From December 1, people taking earth or bricks from the Great Wall will be fined up to 500,000 yuan ($62,500).

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