欢迎来到英语好学网

大学考试|Cops watch for sand thieves

来源:www.zg091.com 2024-07-23

Police in Liuzhen town in Beijing's Changping district have been assigned to patrol farmlands for sand thieves who have destroyed massive patches of cropland and threatened villagers' lives, the local government said.

Farmers said the thieves have been digging up their fields under the cover of darkness and selling the sand to nine mines for industrial use, the Beijing Times reported yesterday.

Dozens of acres of cornfields in Heizhai village were turned into gaping1 holes, the report quoted village head Huang Chenghua as saying.

They dug up the fields without any regard for the corn that was soon to be harvested, Huang said.

There's no way we can grow anything in these big holes. This land is now completely useless.

The proliferation of sand thefts resulted from the soaring demand from mining plants flourishing in the surrounding area, Huang said, adding that a truckload of sand sells for about 100 yuan.

The thefts began in Heizhai in 2005 and worsened in 2006. That year, just one digging team destroyed 20 hectares - and several villagers' tombs - in a single day.

Some villagers have begun sleeping in their fields at night, but their land often ends up being destroyed anyway, as the gangs just wait until the farmers leave the fields.

Huang recalled that he and a group of villagers once tried to defend their fields by running night patrols but were threatened by the gangs.

The thieves once placed funerary wreaths in front of the village committee office and Huang's house, he said.

It was only when media picked up the issue that it began getting widespread attention.

The Changping district government recently ordered police to patrol the farmlands 24 hours a day.

Local police said an investigation2 team will be dispatched to the area and companies found to be involved in the sand trade would have their operations suspended.


相关文章推荐

07

23

大学考试|DPRK set to resume nuclear disablem

The Democratic People's Republic of Korea said Sunday it would resume disabling its main nuclear facilities, hours afte

05

25

大学考试|Childhood bed-wetting: some advice

This is the VOA Special English Health Report.We continue the first in a new series1 of reports from time to time on rai

05

25

大学考试|Italy seeks closer ties with China

Italy will seek closer engagement with China on major global issues when Rome holds the presidency1 of the Group of Eigh

05

25

大学考试|Spanish woman cyclist fails Games d

Spanish cyclist Maria Isabel Moreno has become the first competitor at the Beijing Olympics to fail a drug test, said th

05

25

大学考试|Full steam ahead for rail plan

The development of China's railway network will include the construction of 548 railway stations within the 11th Five-Ye

05

25

大学考试|Trade with Pacific islands to reach

Trade between China and Pacific island countries is expected to reach $2 billion by the end of this year, Minister of Co

04

29

大学考试|Fukuda rules out visit to shrine

Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda ruled out yesterday a visit to Tokyo's Yasakuni shrine1, seen by many in Asia as a

04

29

大学考试|Oil company shuts down a pipeline i

This is the VOA Special English Economics Report.The oil company British Petroleum1 has shut down a pipeline2 connecting

04

29

大学考试|Working to prevent 人工智能DS

This is the VOA Special English Health Report.The sixteenth International 人工智能DS Conference ended Friday in Toronto, Can

04

29

大学考试|Cooking in the great outdoors

VOICE ONE:Welcome to THIS IS AMERICA in VOA Special English. I'm Steve Ember.VOICE TWO:And I'm Barbara Klein. Millions o