Chinese procuratorates strengthen efforts to protect cultural heritage, relics
BEIJING, March 1 (Xinhua) -- Chinese procuratorial organs in 2024 approved the arrest of 1,069 individuals suspected of involvement in cultural relics-related crimes, including intentional destruction of cultural relics, tomb raiding, and illegal trafficking of relics, according to the Supreme People's Procuratorate (SPP).
Last year, prosecutors also filed charges against 1,910 individuals for alleged involvement in such crimes, said Xu Xiangchun, a senior prosecutor at the SPP.
From January 2019 to December 2024, procuratorial organs nationwide handled more than 20,000 public interest litigation cases related to cultural heritage and relics protection -- addressing numerous pressing issues in terms of the preservation and utilization of cultural heritage, Xu added.
Procuratorial organs will enforce the newly-revised law on the protection of cultural relics, which came into force on Saturday, Xu said.
He also noted that the SPP will guide local procuratorial organs in launching specialized supervision campaigns tailored to regional characteristics, focusing on the protection of grotto temples, traditional villages, revolutionary relics and intangible cultural heritage.
Photos
A look at the festive vibes of Tibetan New Year in a Lhasa market, SW China's Xizang
Distinctive view of Wumao Earth Forest in SW China's Yunnan
World's largest indoor ice-and-snow theme park reopens in Harbin, China's Heilongjiang
Hotan county in Xinjiang makes significant progress in combating desertification, sees economic benefits
Related Stories
- Traditional shadow play art shines anew in SW China's Sichuan
- Pic story: inheritor of Kesi weaving technique in NW China
- Feature: Ancient horse racing tradition lives on in N China village
- Memorial ceremony for Chinese sea goddess Mazu observed in Tianjin
- Feature: 1,800-meter-long Tug of war unites ethnic groups in NW China
Copyright © 2025 People's Daily Online. All Rights Reserved.