Police have stepped up patrols to combat ruin raiders of the
underground ancient relics in Xi'an, capital of northwest China's
Shaanxi Province, after authorities caught and
arrested two local farmers stealing tile-ends.
Authorities received reports that some farmers living among the
ruins were looking for relics from the Western Han Dynasty (206 BC
- AD 24), buried in the Chang'an City ruins.
On Sunday, the last day of the seven-day Spring Festival
holiday, the Xi'an Administration of Culture Heritage was tipped
off about the alleged illegal digging, according to Huang Wei,
director of the administration's relics protection department.
"We found more than 100 holes which were made in the ruins by
local farmers looking for the ancient tile-ends," Huang said.
"We used bulldozers to cover all the holes and went to the
nearby villages with local police to investigate the illegal
excavations."
The site contains the ruins of Jianzhang Palace, which was built
in 104 BC and the largest of it’s kind during that era. Under the
ruins, there are large numbers of rare relics with State-level
protection.
According to a local farmer who did not give his name, a piece
of tile-end made in the Western Han Dynasty can be sold for up to
500 yuan (US$62), the average monthly wage for many local
workers.
Heritage protection officials have warned farmers the relics
belong to the State and that private excavations are illegal.
"At present, our cultural relics protection department,
co-operating with other departments concerned, will further
strengthen protection measures, such as 24-hour patrolling around
the ruins, increase farmers' awareness of heritage conservation and
intensify the crackdown on the illegal excavation in the ruins, to
better protect the relics," Huang said.
Tang Long, the director of Xi'an Protection Office for the Ruins
of Chang'an of the Western Han Dynasty, admitted it was difficult
to protect the ruins in Xi'an and other places of historical
value.
"It is a tough issue in the county because the ancient sites are
open and the land with underground relics is now farmland owned by
local farmers, which can not be completely controlled," Tang
explained.
A farmer from Liucunbao,
near Xi'an, stands in a pit dug by local farmers looking for
ancient tiles and coins. Before Spring Festival, farmers found some
Han Dynasty tiles and made a fortune, causing rampant digging for
relics during the holiday.
(China Daily February 28, 2007)