Friday, April 6, 2007

can't afford to die???


dying should be easy by right but because of custom it make life difficult for the poor, can't live and can't die.......In malaysia i believe that the cheapest funeral cost for chinese people is about RM7000-10000, just imagine how the poor people have to suffer.for the rich and famous their funeral sometimes more than RM100,000.

BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese celebrated the annual tomb-sweeping festival on Thursday, but state media said soaring funeral costs were leading to people complaining they can no longer afford to die.
In Beijing and Shanghai, a proper send-off can cost between 10,000 and 20,000 yuan ($1,300-$2,600), Xinhua news agency said. Funerals for family members cost the average Beijing resident three months' salary.
"Funeral costs have surged from hundreds of yuan in the 1980s to tens of thousands of yuan. I'm afraid I cannot afford my own death," the report quoted 89-year-old Li Chengxian as saying.
For decades after the 1949 Communist takeover, China forbade burials in order to conserve badly needed land and insisted instead on cremations. The rule was poorly enforced in its vast countryside, though, and now has effectively been abandoned.
Earlier this week China announced it was to outlaw the trade in tomb futures -- speculating on the business of selling graves -- after it bankrupted many investors, as the government steps up regulations on a lucrative but poorly regulated industry.
Funeral providers rarely charge for services but make money by marking up the cost of products, sometimes as much as 20 times the original price, and mourning relatives are loath to bargain, Xinhua said.
In some areas the cost of a grave per square meter can be twice as much as an apartment.
An official at the Civil Affairs Ministry criticized the practice of some cemetery owners of setting up special graveyards that offer "oversized and luxurious graves", Xinhua said in a separate report
"It's a severe violation of China's funeral regulations and a waste of land resources," it quoted the official as saying.
Some tomb owners also encroach on farmland by building groups of tombs for family members and ancestors who want to be reunited in the afterworld, the official said, condemning the practice as "outdated and superstitious".

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