Lunar New Year pyrotechnic displays prompt calls for end to ancient tradition
Zhuang Pinghui 11 February 2009
In the four Lunar New Year holidays since Beijing lifted a ban on fireworks within the Fifth Ring Road, residents have marked the festive season with ever louder, higher and more magnificent pyrotechnic displays.
Beijingers seemed for the past two weeks to have shown even more enthusiasm for the fireworks, which they hoped would rid them of the bad luck that stalked the country last year.
But the blaze that was caused by “illegal” fireworks and destroyed a hotel building in the Television Cultural Centre on Monday night renewed a debate on whether the ban should be re-imposed.
Watching flames shooting from the nearly finished building that was to house the Mandarin Oriental Hotel in the China Central Television headquarters complex just metres from her home, resident Wang Juan, 58, sighed: “As a Beijing resident, I really think we should ban fireworks.
“For days, people fired off firecrackers and fireworks until late at night, and it became annoyingly noisy.
“There is always news of people getting injured or houses catching fire, not to mention the polluted air. It’s not worth it.”
She had a prime view of CCTV’s Olympic-style “big footprint and big smile” fireworks before the pyrotechnics show quickly led to an inferno.
Beijing’s fire authorities blamed CCTV, saying it set off dangerous fireworks without approval and continued to fire them as the blaze raged.
The city imposed the ban in urban areas in 1993 and partially lifted it in 2006 for the Lunar New Year.
Ms. Wang remembers the fierce fireworks that year.
“Every household fired them like crazy, as if to release all their accumulated desire in one night,” she said.
But in the first five days of the 2006 holiday, 779 people sought treatment for injuries related to fireworks or firecrackers, including 47 who were seriously injured. The next year one person was killed and 663 injured.
The CCTV fire also stirred debate online about whether to reintroduce a complete fireworks ban. More than 1,000 people responded to an online survey supporting a ban. But commentators shrugged off the concern, saying it was more important to honour the 1,300-year-old tradition of scaring off evil spirits with the noise.
Zhang Hui, president of the Tourism Development Research Institute, affiliated with Beijing International Studies University, said: “Igniting fireworks is a tradition and without it the Lunar New Year would lose its flavour.”
Professor Zhang said the losses from the fire should motivate the government to do a better job of monitoring their use.
Renmin University sociologist Zhou Xiaozheng also said that maintaining tradition should outweigh the negatives of fireworks but people should not buy lavish ones.
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CCTV fire reignites fireworks ban debate
Lunar New Year pyrotechnic displays prompt calls for end to ancient tradition
Zhuang Pinghui
11 February 2009
In the four Lunar New Year holidays since Beijing lifted a ban on fireworks within the Fifth Ring Road, residents have marked the festive season with ever louder, higher and more magnificent pyrotechnic displays.
Beijingers seemed for the past two weeks to have shown even more enthusiasm for the fireworks, which they hoped would rid them of the bad luck that stalked the country last year.
But the blaze that was caused by “illegal” fireworks and destroyed a hotel building in the Television Cultural Centre on Monday night renewed a debate on whether the ban should be re-imposed.
Watching flames shooting from the nearly finished building that was to house the Mandarin Oriental Hotel in the China Central Television headquarters complex just metres from her home, resident Wang Juan, 58, sighed: “As a Beijing resident, I really think we should ban fireworks.
“For days, people fired off firecrackers and fireworks until late at night, and it became annoyingly noisy.
“There is always news of people getting injured or houses catching fire, not to mention the polluted air. It’s not worth it.”
She had a prime view of CCTV’s Olympic-style “big footprint and big smile” fireworks before the pyrotechnics show quickly led to an inferno.
Beijing’s fire authorities blamed CCTV, saying it set off dangerous fireworks without approval and continued to fire them as the blaze raged.
The city imposed the ban in urban areas in 1993 and partially lifted it in 2006 for the Lunar New Year.
Ms. Wang remembers the fierce fireworks that year.
“Every household fired them like crazy, as if to release all their accumulated desire in one night,” she said.
But in the first five days of the 2006 holiday, 779 people sought treatment for injuries related to fireworks or firecrackers, including 47 who were seriously injured. The next year one person was killed and 663 injured.
The CCTV fire also stirred debate online about whether to reintroduce a complete fireworks ban. More than 1,000 people responded to an online survey supporting a ban. But commentators shrugged off the concern, saying it was more important to honour the 1,300-year-old tradition of scaring off evil spirits with the noise.
Zhang Hui, president of the Tourism Development Research Institute, affiliated with Beijing International Studies University, said: “Igniting fireworks is a tradition and without it the Lunar New Year would lose its flavour.”
Professor Zhang said the losses from the fire should motivate the government to do a better job of monitoring their use.
Renmin University sociologist Zhou Xiaozheng also said that maintaining tradition should outweigh the negatives of fireworks but people should not buy lavish ones.
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