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Saving the Great Wall from itself

China Daily  Wednesday, July 17, 2002 , Page 2

Nation inks memo the int¡¯l groups to protect the historic cultural relic

By Li Jing        China Daily staff

The Great Wall, dubbed the symbol of the nation¡¯s spirit, is facing a growing threat to its façade from the country¡¯s burgeoning tourist industry, experts said yesterday.

To protect the authenticity of the mammoth structure, which boasts a history of more than two thousand years, the Beijing Administrative Bureau of Culture Relics yesterday signed a memorandum on conservation with the International Friends of the Great Wall, a Hong Kong-based group aiming to protect the environment along the Great Wall.

The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNISCO) is also taking part.

¡°This co-operation will bring domestic and international attention and assistance to what is probably the largest cultural relic protection challenge in China,¡± said Kong Fanzhi, vice-director of the municipal bureau.

¡°Increasing tourism, richer citizens, more cars, more leisure time and cheap development opportunities near the Great Wall have all been encouraged by the municipality¡¯s counties and townships but threaten to blight more and more wallscapes north of Beijing,¡± said William Lindesay, founder and director of International Friends and a trekker of nearly 2,500 kilometres of the wall in 1987.

¡°Litter, graffiti and illegal constructions are just the tip of the iceberg that poses physical and aesthetic damage to the Great Wall and its natural setting.¡±

Beijing has 629 kilometres of wall, and ¡°the cultural landscape of the Great Wall¡± within it has been included by the US-based World Monuments Fund on its ¡°2002 List of the World¡¯s Most 100 Endangered Sites,¡± Kong said.

Municipal officials said they are striving to strike a balance between preventing parts of the wall from collapsing and preserving its authenticity.

The city is expected to issue its first regulation on Great Wall protection later this year in a move that should deter more damage, said Kong.

Edmund Moukala, programme officer for culture at UNISCO¡¯s representative office to east Asia, said the Great Wall, a gigantic world heritage site, is being damaged, physically and aesthetically, by human beings rather than natural deterioration.

¡°A saturated tourist industry is a disaster to the heritage site,¡± Moukala said. ¡°We should first educate people, especially youths, about appreciating the value of the Great Wall to protect it.¡±

 
 
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