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  China's Great Wall cries over wayward graffiti   (cri)  Updated: 2005-11-07 13:36  
 No one is a hero, a renowned Chinese leader once said, until he steps onto 
the Great Wall. Nowadays too many Chinese want to become "heroes", as they flood 
onto the Great Wall and carve their names on its bricks.  
 
 
 
   The Great Wall in 
 China suffers graphic damage from tourists, as seen in this file photo 
 taken from the Badaling section near capital Beijing. 
 [Xinhua] |    The Great Wall has been suffering 
this graphic damage for many years. Now - according to a Xinhua News Agency 
report, Saturday - the Association for the Great Wall and the management of the 
Great Wall at Badaling have initiated a joint campaign to curb the graffiti vice 
and also invite proposals as to how the wall can best be patched and repaired so 
as to better protect this World Heritage site. 
In a recent interview with the media, Dong Yaohui, deputy Chairman of the 
Great Wall Association, spoke in heart-sick tones of how no brick in the Wall 
seems to have escaped the graffitists' hands. 
 He recalled accompanying a visiting dignitary to the Wall in 1998, and how 
the leader's daughter curiously touched or pointed at the graffiti carved on the 
stones. He was unable to properly present the grandeur of the Great Wall to 
these foreign guests, but instead worried about how he would explain if they 
asked him about these remarks on the Wall. He said he felt terribly ashamed of 
his Chinese fellows who had carved on the bricks. 
 
 
 
 
   The graffiti indicates the two tourists who 
 carved their names here are from Jiangsu Province. 
 [Xinhua] |   
It is reported that tourists have carved remarks with knives, or even painted 
on the wall with liquid inks and paint, in incisions up to half a centimeter in 
depth. The earliest graffiti can be traced back to the 1950s, but now the 
phenomena appears to be becoming less and less apparent.  
Chairman Dong has called on the public and tourists to join hands to protect 
the Great Wall, the only structure of its kind on the World Heritage List.  
In Beijing, the municipal government has made great efforts in this regard, 
proclaiming in August 2003 a local law to strengthen protective measures for the 
Great Wall. 
 The municipality stipulates that all local government bodies and individuals 
within the administrative region along the Great Wall, as well as all tourists, 
foreign and domestic, are obliged to take measures to protect the Great Wall. 
 Also in July 2004, more than eight hundred retired Chinese generals made a 
proposal calling on the public to protect the Great Wall. 
 The made their call on the 20th anniversary of late leader, Deng Xiaoping, 
inscribing the words: "Love China and Mend the Great Wall" in 1984. A wave of 
protection activities have also been initiated by Chinese people both at home 
and abroad.
 
   
  
  
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