{"id":147584,"date":"2012-12-03T15:46:48","date_gmt":"2012-12-03T23:46:48","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/chinadigitaltimes.net\/?p=147584"},"modified":"2014-03-11T17:16:41","modified_gmt":"2014-03-12T00:16:41","slug":"henan-officials-commit-a-grave-error","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/chinadigitaltimes.net\/2012\/12\/henan-officials-commit-a-grave-error\/","title":{"rendered":"Henan Officials Commit a Grave Error"},"content":{"rendered":"
China saw 41 self-immolation protests against forced evictions<\/a> between 2009 and 2011. One might expect that death would at least be the end of the problem; but not in Zhukou city in Henan province, where local authorities are razing millions of graves to make way for farmland. Scholars, local residents and sympathisers nationwide all oppose the campaign, but despite reports last month that it had been abandoned, an official insisted that “we will not give up the plan just because there were some online debates<\/a>.” At Bloomberg’s World View, Adam Minter examined the public outcry against this \u201cbrutal, barbaric\u201d practice<\/strong><\/a>.<\/p>\n Even many critics of the grave-razing program [\u2026] acknowledge that China needs to reform funeral practices (and, inevitably, encourage cremation) to meet growing land demands. What primarily offends these commentators is the brusque method used to clear away the graves in Zhoukou. On Nov. 19, Zhong Yongheng, a native of Zhoukou and a journalist with People\u2019s Daily, the official, self-declared Communist Party mouthpiece, used his account on the Twitter-like Ten Cent microblog, to post his family\u2019s experience with Zhoukou\u2019s program. His family, he notes, no longer lives in Zhoukou but has relocated north to Beijing:<\/p>\n \u201cYou should give us notice at least before you damage our ancestral tombs, don\u2019t you think? My family members are all in Beijing and didn\u2019t get any advance notice from anyone. Then we suddenly received news that our ancestral tombs were leveled by an excavator. My parents turned toward the south, wailing.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n [\u2026] So far, there\u2019s no evidence that Zhoukou\u2019s officials — or its government — will benefit financially from the grave- clearing program. On the contrary, the Beijing News has reported that some low-level government officials, under pressure to provide good examples for the farmers, have personally dug up their ancestors\u2019 bones.<\/p>\n In one tragic case of a low-level official making an example of his ancestors, however, the digging dislodged a large tombstone that crashed onto two of his living family members, killing both. Sympathy was a rare sight in the several hundred comments left beneath the Beijing News story, many of which suggested that supernatural forces were at play. Meanwhile, other comments took a more vindictive approach, with one of the most repeated comments qualifying as the most direct: \u201cDeserved it.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n
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