Tourists gather on the Great Wall outside Beijing, China. Photo: Reuters |
China’s cultural
authorities are vowing to crack down on criminal damage along the
sprawling Great Wall amid fears that the UNESCO site is
disappearing, brick by brick.
The
Guardian UK report continues:
Officials
at the state administration of cultural heritage (SACH) announced that regular
inspections and random checks would be carried out along the estimated 13,000
miles (21,000km) of wall to ensure local municipalities are following national
protection measures introduced a decade ago.
Until
now, the laws have done little to preserve one of the world’s manmade wonders.
While adverse environmental conditions such as wind and rain are blamed for
eroding nearly a third of the Ming-era wall, officials have pointed to reckless
human behaviour for destroying sections of it.
Villagers
who live near the wall routinely steal bricks from it to use as building
materials or to sell, according to China’s Great Wall Society. The group
released a survey in 2014 that warned that many towers were also increasingly
shaky.
“It
doesn’t have large-scale damage, but if you accumulate the different damaged
parts, it is very serious,” said the society’s vice-chairman, Dong Yaohui. “The
problem is we spend a lot of money on repairing the Great Wall instead of
preserving the Great Wall.”
Parts
of the Great Wall date back to the 3rd century BC, though much of it – about
4,000 miles – was built during the Ming dynasty of 1368 to 1644. According to
SACH figures, less than 10% of it is considered well preserved.
Dong
said the degradation had grown worse over the years because of a lack of
resources and oversight in municipalities across the 15 provinces that the wall
traverses.
The
Ming-era sections north of Beijing are the most popular with tourists, drawing
millions of visitors every year and leaving parts of the massive heritage
site defaced with graffiti. State media also reported that villagers took
bricks or slabs with historic engraving to sell to tourists for 30 yuan (£3).
A surge of interest in “wild Great Wall” tourism, where hikes follow crumbling sections, also poses a threat to decaying stretches in remote regions, according to reports.
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