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BEIJING, April 15 (Xinhua) -- Local government of Beijing has taken back
the right to manage the Badaling section of the Great Wall from a listed
company, a move demonstrating the government's determination to fulfill its
duties to safeguard and protect the world heritage site.
Badaling Special Zone Office in Yanqing County, an accredited
representative of local government, will take charge of managing and protecting
the 7,600-meter-long Badaling section of the Great Wall.
The office would put all the tourism income into protection of the Great
Wall in the future, said Li Shuwang, deputy head of the Badaling Special Zone
Management Committee, early last week.
"Beijing has set a good example in protecting the Great Wall," said Huang
Yongren, head of the Academic Department of the China Great Wall Society.
The Badaling section of the Great Wall has been managed by a joint venture company, the Badaling
Tourism Development Co. Ltd., since 1997. The company mainly sells
entrance tickets to the Badaling section of the Great Wall, and it also controls
operation of museums, restaurants and other commercial facilities inside
the scenic zone.
However, the company's management confronts with China's Law on Protection of Cultural
Relics, revised and took effect in 2002, and the Administrative Regulations on
Protection of the Great Wall of the Beijing Municipality, becoming effective
in 2003, both prohibiting any institution and individual from transferring
and pawning the Great Wall to or converting Great Wall into properties
of certain enterprises.
"It took us three years to take back the management right, and now we are expecting
that Great Wall will be well protected in the future," said Li with the
Badaling office.
The Great Wall stretches for 6,700 km, traversing Gansu, Ningxia, Inner
Mongolia, Shanxi, Shaanxi, Hebei and Liaoning. Construction of the walls began
during the Warring States Period (475-221 B.C.), when separate sections were
built in scattered strategic areas.
Like other sites of historical interests around the world, the Great Wall is
being threatened by damages caused by nature and human activities. An article carried
on the latest edition of the Newsweek magazine listed the Great Wall as one
of the seven endangered heritage sites in the world. The article said close to
two-thirds of the Great Wall became rotten and used for commercial purposes.
"The gigantic Great Wall itself increases difficulties in protection," said Li,
with the Badaling Special Zone Management Committee. The Beijing's sections of
the Great Wall stretches for more than 600 km, only a small section, including
the Badaling section, has opened to tourists. The remainder sections in
Beijing stands on high mountains which are seldom visited by people.
"This is a fact that we must face in protecting the Great Wall," Li said.
According to China's law, cultural relics belong to the state and should be managed
by departments of cultural heritage. However, the fact is that while
cultural departments are performing their duties in managing cultural relics,
many tourism departments and even companies also step in the management and
development of sites of historical interest, including the Great Wall.
"This has hampered the implementation of China's law on protection of
cultural relics," said Huang with the China Great Wall Society.
A hip-hop party held on the Beijing's Jinshanling section of the Great Wall in
July last year stunned the world overnight. Some people said such activities
pose potential damages to the Great Wall.
In 1997, local government leased the management right of the Jinshanling
section to a company for 50 years. In 2002, the company was ordered to return
the management right to the government according to the revised China's Law on
Protection of Cultural Relics. The company refused and demanded a compensation
of 10 million yuan (1.25 million U.S. dollars). The dispute has not settled till
now.
Taking back the right to manage the Badaling section of the Great Wall is of
great significance in achieving a win-win situation between the development of
tourism and protection of the Great Wall, said Yu Changjiang, director of
Beijing Municipal Tourism Administration. "This can be used as a reference by
other scenic and tourism zones elsewhere in China."
The Great Wall has been put under state key protection in China. It was put
on the list of the World Heritage sites of the UNESCO (United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) in 1987.
Following the Law on Protection of Cultural Relics, the central and local
governments have promulgated a series of laws and regulations on protection of
the Great Wall and cracking down on illegal activities in areas along the Wall.
Beijing Municipal Cultural Heritage Administration has drafted specific
regulations to protect the Badaling, Juyong Pass and Simatai sections of the
Great Wall.
Chinese people also have high expectations for better protection of the Great
Wall. China Great Wall Society has solicited tens of thousands of suggestions
from the general public for the Great Wall protection since last
October.
Shan Jixiang, director of the State Cultural Heritage Administration, said improvement
of concerned laws and regulations were needed to better protect the
Great Wall.
He disclosed that drafting of Regulations on Protection of Great Wall was
proceeding smoothly and was expected to be issued within this year.
Beijing has taken the lead in the country to define the Great Wall
protection areas and places nearby for monitoring.
"The Beijing municipal government and institutions in charge of tourism
development will jointly establish and fund special teams to safeguard all
sections of the Great Wall in Beijing," said Yu Ping, deputy head of the Beijing
Municipal Administration of Cultural Heritage. Enditem |