BEIJING, July 25 (Xinhua) -- China will start renovation of another 10
cultural relic sites that suffered severe damage in the May 12 earthquake this
year, according to a cultural official hereon Friday.
The new renovations were in addition to projects that had already started
in Dujiangyan and for ancient buildings of the Qiang ethnic group in the quake
area, said Li Peisong, a State Administration of Cultural Heritage official.
"The two projects were the first to start because damage there was severe
and the two were world-level heritage."
The Dujiangyan ancient building cluster, in the hard-hit Dujiangyan area,
was listed as World Heritage. The Qiang buildings were on the waiting list for
World Heritage designation.
Li said the Qiang buildings were severely battered as they were mainly in
areas devastated in the southwest China quake, such as Wenchuan, Lixian, Maoxian
and Beichuan in Sichuan Province.
Zhang Bai, the administration's deputy head, said a 269 state-level
heritage sites, including Dujiangyan, and 250 provincial-level sites in
provinces such as Sichuan, Gansu and Shaanxi, had reported damage after the
quake.
Nearly 3,000 cultural relic items, including 292 precious ones, were
damaged, Zhang added.
"The quake was also a disaster to cultural relics in the area. Huge losses
have incurred, but it's hard to calculate the losses in the exact amount of
money."
He told reporters that funds needed for the renovation would come from the
government reconstruction funds, financial support from other provinces and
donations from both home and abroad.
Zhang emphasized the country was "welcome" and "thankful to" overseas
donations to cover the damage to cultural relics in quake areas, and was ready
to accept such foreign assistance.