| Zhuang Pinghui
9 May 2007
(c) 2007 South China Morning Post Publishers Limited, Hong Kong. All rights reserved.
Mainland tourists jammed the country's world heritage sites during the "golden week" holidays amid concerns that the crowds could inflict permanent damage on the attractions.
More than 4.86 million visitors from home and abroad flocked to Beijing during the seven days, a record high for the past 20 "golden week" holidays.
The Palace Museum had 440,000 visitors from May 1 to 7, an 8 per cent increase over the same period last year, generating 23 million yuan in ticket sales.
On May 2 alone, the museum handled 114,800 visitors, 2.3 times its daily maximum capacity and also the second highest number since the seven-day Labour Day holiday arrangement was introduced, according to the People's Daily.
The newspaper said many visitors complained that the huge crowds and noise affected their trips.
"Many tourists said they didn't see many of the cultural relics but only a lot of people's backs. It was like a living hell," the report said.
At the Badaling section of the Great Wall near Beijing, the number of visitors surged by one third over last year and more than 62,000 visitors queued each day of the break for their turn to climb the heritage site.
Xie Jiuzhong , director of the Badaling Promotion and Marketing Centre, told the paper the centre had tried to divert the crowds by creating new starting points and ticket windows and mobilising 13 teams of police and staff members to guide visitors.
Pingyao , in Shanxi province , one of the 33 Unesco world heritage sites on the mainland, hosted 2.5 times its maximum visitor capacity on May 4, pushing the town's tourism takings for the week up 8.2 per cent year on year to 94.5 million yuan.
Xie Ninggao , director of World Heritage Studies Centre at Peking University, said pressure from excessive numbers of visitors would change a site's environment and cause incalculable damage.
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