Off the wire
More Tianjin flights as Beijing runway closes for overhaul  • China to increase mandarin speaking rate to 80 pct  • Urgent: Militants' ambush kills 4 security personnel in E. Afghan province  • Roundup: Serbian PM Vucic declares victory in presidential elections  • AirAsia unveils new Vietnamese carrier  • Feature: Tree burial - new alternative to bury deceased in Macao  • Hong Kong shares up 0.28 pct by midday  • Resale price of Singapore's public housing down 0.6 pct in Q1: HDB  • Ecuador's ruling party candidate leads presidential runoff: National Electoral Council  • Vietnam's Mother Goddesses worship receives UNESCO's recognition  
You are here:   Home

Chinese honor deceased during Tomb-Sweeping Day

Xinhua, April 3, 2017 Adjust font size:

A total of 5.3 million Chinese visited 150 major cemeteries to honor their deceased relatives Sunday, the first day of the three-day holiday for the Tomb-Sweeping Day which falls on Tuesday.

The number of people visiting burial sites across the nation increased by 34.2 percent year on year, according to the Ministry of Civil Affairs (MCA).

The cemeteries deployed 33,000 service staff, 76.6 percent more than a year earlier, to maintain order during heavy traffic, helping disperse 899,000 vehicles, up 43.5 percent year on year.

Tomb-Sweeping Day, or Qingming, falls early April, when Chinese people commemorate their deceased loved ones by visiting tombs and offering sacrifices.

Modern and more eco-friendly ways of honoring the deceased have emerged in recent years, such as "Internet tomb-sweeping" and sea-burials.

The ministry said no severe accidents were reported on the day. Endi