The treasures of China’s thousands of years of culture face being plundered, sometimes violently, or disappearing under bulldozers as authorities either do not care or do not have the resources to look after them, State Administration of Cultural Heritage Director Li Xiaoji (勵小捷) said.
In an interview published yesterday in the influential Chinese Communist Party newspaper the Study Times, Li said the situation he faced in trying to protect the country’s culture was “severe.”
From 2009 to last year police uncovered more than 7,000 cases of cultural artifacts being stolen, smuggled out of the country or otherwise plundered, especially tombs, Li told the newspaper, published by the Central Party School, which trains rising officials.
“These criminal activities are organized, use high technology and violence and steal to order,” Li said, adding that efforts to crack down had achieved some results, but the road ahead would be hard and difficult.
Another problem was that some local governments seemed not to care about the treasures in their jurisdiction, or simply lacked the ability to look after them.
“In some culturally protected areas or where there are construction controls there is illegal construction, damaging the historical features, including the treasures themselves. Some precious ancient sites and buildings have vanished beneath bulldozers,” Li said.
In many cases the damage was actually caused by local governments and officials, he said.
However, this was hardly surprising as his administration lacked people and money to protect cultural artifacts and in four provinces there are fewer than 10 people in the job, Li said.
Some parts of China particularly rich in cultural heritage had no dedicated officials working to protect the treasures, he added.
There was also a huge funding gap, especially in poorer central and western regions, Li said.
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