Protect ancient buildings
Updated: 2013-07-19 22:17
(chinadaily.com.cn)
|
||||||||
After several buildings of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) were destroyed by a school in Nanyang, Henan province, the local government asked for them to be rebuilt. However, the originals can never be replaced, said a column in People's Daily (excerpts below).
The nine buildings had been standing in Nanyang for more than 100 years. On one night they were reduced to ruins by a local school expanding its facilities.
This situation highlights a growing problem. Many heritage sites are being destroyed to make way for development.
Profit is the motive as land sales generate revenue for local governments.
In contrast, the penalty for destroying historical buildings is extremely light.
It is high time to stop the destruction of historical buildings through both legislation and the stricter enforcement of laws. We need to act before they are all gone.
- Firefighters hold line against California wildfire
- Rat, rabbit head sculptures on display
- Detroit files biggest ever US municipal bankruptcy
- Russia jails opposition leader
- Plane crash victims' parents seek answers
- 'Improving' Mandela marks 95th birthday
- Qingdao eatery finds use for pesky seaweed
- From university campus to boot camp
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Party seeks to boost ties with the public |
Conundrum over sexual bribery |
Bar street heaven for expats, hell for locals |
Chinese Haute Couture |
Railway cities staying on track |
More concerns over camps |
Today's Top News
Detroit faces uncertain future in bankruptcy
Apple, Google urge surveillance disclosure
Monetary system needs overhaul, says report
US companies seek tougher enforcement of IP laws
Syrian refugees demand help from Kerry at camp
Second iPhone shock leaves man in coma
China's government spends less in 2012
Pregnant Olympic runner dies, baby saved
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |