Chinese officials ‘bought corpses’ to meet cremation quota
Quotas were introduced to preserve land for farming and development, but have angered local residents
Two officials in China have been arrested for allegedly buying corpses in order to meet their state-mandated cremation targets.
They reportedly bought several bodies from a grave robber and are believed to have paid between £150 and £300 per corpse.
"Body-snatching is, therefore, a lucrative, illicit business, involving bribe-taking local officials who look the other way," the Washington Post reports.
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Identified only as He and Dong, the two men were in charge of implementing Beijing’s funeral management reform. The cremation quotas were introduced in order to discourage burials and preserve land for farming and development.
But the rules have been met with widespread resistance in a country where ancestral worship at grave sites is seen as an important tradition, AFP reports. It is also a commonly held belief that the body must be intact in order to achieve a peaceful afterlife.
The Chinese media has even reported that several elderly citizens committed suicide before the rules were implemented in order to ensure they could be buried. Other reports suggest that many families have simply resorted to burying their relatives in secret.
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