Offbeat | Two detained for Great Wall damage

Tourists walk in snow on the Great Wall, north of Beijing, China

Tourists walk in snow on the Great Wall, north of Beijing, China

Police in northwest China’s Gansu Province have detained two people for damaging the Great Wall, local authorities said yesterday. According to Xinhua, in an inspection tour in mid-August, the Gansu Cultural Relics Bureau found that holes had been dug under seven towers along the Wall in Jingtai County. The bureau informed local police, which detained two people suspected of having been digging for gold.
Damaging historical structures is a crime in China. Perpetrators face fines or prison terms of up to years. Stretching over 69 km, the Jingtai stretch of the Great Wall was built in the Ming dynasty in 1599.
Unlike eastern parts of the Great Wall in Beijing and Hebei, which were mostly constructed with stones and bricks, sections in Gansu were built with earth. After centuries of erosion from wind and sandstorms, they have become extremely fragile.
Construction of the Great Wall, which was listed as a World Heritage Site by the UNESCO in 1987, began during the reign of the first emperor of Qin Dynasty (221-206 BC) in ancient China, to keep out foreign invaders, and lasted through feudal dynasties in China. MDT/Xinhua

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