According to Ningxia Daily, almost 100 meters of
the Great
Wall in Xinxing village, Zhongwei City was destroyed last month
after being plundered for road building materials.
Ningxia
Hui Autonomous Region has been called "the Great Wall Museum"
because of its profusion of rammed earth sections, but it only took
two nights on January 23 and 24 to wreck the Xinxing stretch.
Zhongwei's public security bureau has begun investigations into
the case, in which material from the wall is thought to have been
used to pave a road.
Shi Yuqing, a staff clerk at the Zhongwei Municipal Museum, said
the destroyed segment was about 30 kilometers from the city center.
The area's sections of wall were built west to east during the Ming
Dynasty (1368-1644) from Gansu
Province to Ningxia.
According to Shi, someone reported the incident to the museum on
the afternoon of January 25 and specialists went to investigate the
next morning.
The regional cultural relics bureau then got involved, and after
two days of work, established that nearly 100 meters of
visible and intact Great Wall had been intentionally leveled. With
the local culture department, they decided to take it to the
police.
An official from the bureau, Xu Cheng, said that the
construction unit that had destroyed the section should be forced
to mend it, and hoped they would be punished severely for their
crime.
Dong Yaohui, vice president of the China Great Wall Academy,
said most of region's sections are made from rammed earth, which is
often coveted as an excellent construction material.
"Between 60 and 70 percent of the Great Wall in Ningxia is made
of this material. If people destroy it wantonly over and over
again, most of it will disappear." He said the fact that the
construction unit acted at night shows they knew they were
violating the law, and should be punished accordingly.
But last year about 400 meters of the Great Wall in Zhongwei
were destroyed and those responsible have yet to be punished.
Dong said that, several years ago, a taskmaster who plundered
the wall's rammed earth was only punished with an 80,000-yuan
(US$9,666) fine. He noted that this was less than it would have
cost to buy legal construction materials, so was not an effective
deterrent.
(China.org.cn by Chen Lin, February 7, 2005)