Special report: Reconstruction After Earthquake¡¡
BEIJING, June 7 -- A senior cultural heritage
official said on Friday that more than 6 billion yuan (866 million U.S. dollars)
will be required to restore relics damaged in seven areas by the May 12
earthquake.
"We will apply for special financial support
from the central government as the losses were caused by natural disasters and
mostly in relatively underdeveloped areas," State Administration of Cultural
Heritage Director Shan Jixiang told a press conference in Beijing.
A total of 169 relics under State protection and 250
under provincial or municipal protection are known to have been severely damaged
by the quake in Sichuan, Gansu, Shaanxi, Yunnan, Shanxi and Hubei provinces, and
Chongqing municipality.
Another 2,766 relics in museums, including 292
precious ones, were damaged by the quake, according to the administration.
Noting that international assistance was welcome,
Shan said: "We have received both funding and technical aid offers from overseas
individuals and organizations, such as from Italy and France."
The official stressed that traditional materials
would be used to ensure that the relics are restored to their pre-quake state.
Restoration and protection efforts will initially be
focused on Dujiangyan, where a number of relics including two UNESCO World
Heritage Sites, were severely damaged.
The Erwang Temple, or "Temple of Two Kings", which
was built 2,000 years ago to honor Li Bing, the then governor of Sichuan, and
his son for their contribution to the construction of Dujiangyan, the world's
oldest irrigation project still in operation. It largely collapsed in the quake.
At Mount Qingcheng, the birthplace of Taoism, China's
only indigenous religion, several ancient buildings are in danger of collapsing.
"Expert teams have already started an appraisal of
the losses," Shan said. "Restoration and repair work will begin this month."
Apart from restoring the relics, work will also take
place to ensure they are able to withstand any further natural disasters, the
official pointed out.
During his visit to Beichuan county on May 22,
Premier Wen Jiabao said that the ruins of the county town should be preserved as
a museum.
Shan said the administration would give the
highest-level protection to earthquake sites in Beichuan in order to build such
a museum.
Experts from the administration have already started
clearing the sites in Beichuan, paying attention to maintaining their
authenticity and completeness.
So far, China only has two rather simple earthquake
museums in Qinghai province and the city of Tangshan in Hebei province.
"The construction of the museum will require
expertise in the fields of geology, planning, construction and social sciences,"
the official said.
(Source: China Daily)