China Daily

Giant statue comes under fire online

- By LI LEI lilei@ chinadaily. com. cn

Jianhe county in Guizhou province — a region with some of the last remnants of rural poverty in China — has been a target of criticism recently for spending 86 million yuan ($ 12.9 million) to erect an 88- meter- tall statue as part of a tourism developmen­t drive.

The project has sparked concerns about extravagan­ce and the abuse of poverty relief funds, with the hashtag “an impoverish­ed county in Guizhou has spent lavishly on a statue” receiving 4.32 million views on the Sina Weibo microblogg­ing service.

One user said cultural icons did not need to be super expensive and the money could have been used to improve lives more directly.

But some defended the project, arguing that the statue had bolstered the profile of a mountainou­s region that was not well suited to industries other than tourism.

Local authoritie­s also brushed aside concerns, saying that scrutiny of the use of relief funds had been stepped up in the past three years in line with national directives from the top leadership.

Constructi­on of the statue of Yangesha, a goddess worshipped by the local Miao ethnic community, began in late 2016 and was finished the next year as part of a hot springs resort and a Yangesha theme park.

Local government figures show the complex has generated more than 20 million yuan in tourism revenue since it opened to the public on Oct 1, 2017, and has had an average of 1,000 visitors a day.

Jianhe was among 832 countyleve­l regions labeled by central authoritie­s as being impoverish­ed, which suggests a local poverty rate of 3 percent or more, but the county had that label removed in March due to progress in the local antipovert­y campaign.

Local authoritie­s started tapping the cultural and tourism value of the Miao goddess as early as 2007 by featuring Yangesha in publicity campaigns, public documents showed.

Massive statues have long been used to showcase local culture or form new landmarks aimed at attracting tourists.

But some projects have sparked controvers­y for being extravagan­t or not being in harmony with the natural landscape.

For example, the city planning authority in Jingzhou, Hubei province, was placed under scrutiny earlier this month over a 57- metertall statue weighing 1,200 metric tons in its ancient town area. The Ministry of Housing and UrbanRural Developmen­t urged the city to take measures to rectify problems including the statue’s subsiding foundation­s and its unfavorabl­e influence on the ancient town’s skyline. The statue was modeled after Guanyu, a legendary general who lost a famous battle in the city during the Three Kingdoms period ( 220- 280).

 ?? WU DONGJUN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A massive statue of Yangesha stands in Jianhe county, Guizhou province.
WU DONGJUN / FOR CHINA DAILY A massive statue of Yangesha stands in Jianhe county, Guizhou province.

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