Off the wire
China imposes anti-trust fine on Mercedes-Benz  • Results of FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour Fuzhou Open  • Thunder fires head coach Scott Brooks  • India approves ILO protocol on bonded labor  • Sri Lanka's ruling coalition faces rift  • CSKA Moscow heads to the Euroleague Final Four  • Xinhua Asia-Pacific news summary at 0600 GMT, April 23  • CBA defending champ Beijing moves its home to Mastercard Center  • India approves proposal to try minors above 16 years as adults in case of heinous crimes  • Indian gov't orders probe into farmer's suicide at political rally in Delhi  
You are here:   Home

Five caught in north China for burrowing to steal antiques

Xinhua, April 23, 2015 Adjust font size:

Five people have been arrested in north China's Hebei province for digging a tunnel in an attempt to steal antiques from a pagoda, said local police on Wednesday.

Three others involved are still at large.

Police were informed a group was trying to break into the Guanghui Temple in Zhengding, Hebei on March 2. They rented a restaurant not far from the pagoda to dig their tunnel. Police became suspicious after the restaurant, which advertised lamb soup, never opened its door.

After the arrest, police found a hole seven meters deep, which was connected to a tunnel more than 50 meters long. An initial investigation showed the suspects started digging last December.

The Dinghui Temple was built in the Tang Dynasty (618-907), but the pagoda, exquisitely decorated, was rare and typical in the Jin Dynasty (1115-1234), or Jurchen Dynasty. It was put on China's national cultural relics list in 1961. Endi