Special Report: NPC, CPPCC Annual Sessions 2007
BEIJING, March 11 (Xinhua) -- A Chinese political advisor here on Sunday proposed the government make more efforts to protect the Grand Canal, saying the ancient waterway that connects Beijing and Hangzhou, capital of booming eastern Zhejiang Province, is not only culturally valuable but also remains important to economy.
"We have already made a good beginning in the
protection for the canal. However, we do face a series of problems," said Liu
Feng at the third plenary meeting of the annual session of the National
Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), the
country's top advisory body.
The protection work lacks an overall planning and a
unified coordination mechanism, as well as adequate funds, while the folk
customs and art along the canal is on the verge of extinction, said Liu.
The 1,794-km canal is the longest artificial waterway
in the world. Parts of the canal were dug in the fifth century B.C. and the full
canal had been serving as a major south-north artery of transport after being
completed in the 13th century.
The ancient canal still plays an important role in
navigation, irrigation and flood control, the advisor said.
More than 100,000 vessels sail on the canal at
present, transporting goods three times the freight of the north-south artery
Beijing-Shanghai railway. The canal has also great potential in tourism
development, according to Liu.
Liu called for the establishment of an administration
commission of the Grand Canal directly under the State Council, or the cabinet,
and a national regulation on the protection for the canal.
He also suggested the application agenda for the
canal's world heritage status be drawn as soon as possible.
Wu Jianmin, spokesman for the CPPCC National
Committee session, said on March 2 that the canal deserves equal protection
efforts to those given to the Great Wall, which is under state key protection
and on the World Heritage list of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization (UNESCO).
The Grand Canal has been included into China's new
candidate list for the UNESCO World Heritage status.