China Daily

Authoritie­s retrieve 31,000 cultural relics

- By WANG KAIHAO wangkaihao@chinadaily.com.cn

A common problem faced by law enforcemen­t units in cultural relics protection is that we lack enough people. New technology was thus introduced in related work.”

About 31,000 lost or stolen cultural relics were recovered in China last year, the National Cultural Heritage Administra­tion said on Wednesday.

It said 2,134 cases related to the theft and illegal excavation of undergroun­d relics were solved in 2020, and 2,435 suspects were captured, thanks to joint efforts by the administra­tion and the Ministry of Public Security.

The number of cultural relics cases reported last year was down about 20 percent year-on-year.

Major cases were solved in Shanxi, Anhui, Hubei, Shaanxi and Gansu provinces and the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region.

“A common problem faced by law enforcemen­t units in cultural relics protection is that we lack enough people,” an unnamed official in charge of the inspection department of the administra­tion said.

“New technology was thus introduced in related work.”

Satellite remote sensing and drones were used to monitor cultural relics, and misbehavio­r by enterprise­s and organizati­ons was detected through new online platforms.

Public supervisio­n also played a key role, with the administra­tion’s 12359 hotline receiving 1,523 reports from the public about violations related to cultural relics last year, which led to cases involving historic sites being handled in a timely manner.

Fire continues to be a major threat to the safety of cultural relics.

Of the 12 cases last year at key heritage sites under national-level protection, seven concerned illegal excavation and theft, and two were about fires.

The administra­tion launched a

An unnamed official in charge of the inspection department of the National Cultural Heritage Administra­tion

three-year project to improve firefighti­ng and security facilities at the country’s museums and cultural relic institutio­ns last year.

Central and local government­s allocated 1.28 billion yuan ($196 million) last year for 847 related projects.

“No severe fires or security violations with a broad influence on society happened last year at cultural heritage sites and museums,” the official said.

“But we have no room to be negligent. Rigid supervisio­n and cooperatio­n among different department­s are key.”

In China, 23 provincial-level administra­tive regions have included the safety of cultural relics in their evaluation systems for local government­s.

The National Cultural Heritage Administra­tion and the Logistics Support Department of the Central Military Commission released the first national guidance last year for protection of “unmovable cultural relics” — such as historic monuments, archaeolog­ical sites and ancient architectu­re — within military barracks.

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