A campaign in southeastern China to phase out burials has led to
widespread complaints about the destruction of thousands of coffins and
the exhumation of at least one corpse.To get more
China news, you can visit shine news official website.
The
province of Jiangxi had been promoting “burial reform,” and encouraging
residents to have their dead cremated rather than buried. The goal is
to reduce the use of land for graveyards and spending on expensive
coffins.
Such changes have been promoted in several places around
China in recent years, and often clash with traditional ideas about the
treatment of dead bodies.
On Wednesday, the Jiangxi provincial
government backtracked somewhat. It did not apologize but instead blamed
overzealous local officials, saying some counties and towns “were
excessive in handling matters.”Although these were in the minority, they
caused harmful effects and hurt some people’s feelings,” the Jiangxi
department of civil affairs said in a statement.
In Jiangxi and
some other parts of China, people buy their coffins and store them in
their homes. To meet a target of having all dead be cremated starting
Sept. 1, officials in some rural parts of Jiangxi confiscated and
destroyed coffins that many older people had long saved to buy.Videos
posted on social media showed the police raiding houses, excavators
crushing piles of empty coffins and workers dismantling elaborate tombs.
Such
methods shocked many in China and were criticized in national media
outlets. “To crudely implement a 100 percent cremation rate, these
methods are inhuman, unlawful and should stop immediately,” The
Procuratorate Daily, a state-run legal newspaper, said on Tuesday.
One
local government in Yiyang County in Jiangxi announced in April that
officials had exhumed the coffin of an 81-year-old villager whom family
members had buried near their home. The coffin and the corpse were then
cremated.The entire process went smoothly, and family members were
even-tempered,” the county government announced afterward.
A
reporter for The Legal Daily, another state-run newspaper, found
otherwise, writing in May that locals considered the act deeply
disrespectful and had burst into tears when they learned of the plan.
Four
years ago, when one city in neighboring Anhui Province began seizing
coffins, six older people killed themselves, The Beijing News reported.
In
Hong Kong, where most people are cremated, the government has
encouraged the spreading of ashes in gardens or in the sea because of
dwindling space for special buildings in which to store urns.
The Wall