‘2012
End of the world panic’ sweeps across China
China
is taking the date of December 21 - the day the world is due to end -
seriously, with panic buying of candles sweeping through counties.
Malcolm Moore reports.
Lu
Zhenghai began building the 65ft ship in 2010 and spent his life
savings of £100,000 to build the ark for 20 people. Photo:
REX FEATURES
7
December, 2012
China's
most famous book of prophecies, the 7th century Tui Bei Tu, makes no
direct mention of the end of the world.
But
in Sichuan province, panic buying of candles has swept through two
counties in the fear that an ancient Mayan prediction that the world
will end on December 21 proves to be true.
"Candles
are selling by the hundreds, with buyers constantly coming to the
market. Many stores have run out," said Huang Zhaoli, a shopper
at the Neijing Wholesale Market, to the West China City Daily
newspaper.
Mr
Li, the owner of the Guangfa grocery store in Chengdu, added: "Lots
of people have been buying candles recently. At first, we had no idea
why. But then we heard someone muttering about the continuous
darkness".
The
source of the panic was traced to a post on Sina Weibo, China's
version of Twitter, predicting that there will be three days of
darkness when the apocalypse arrives.
Since
the beginning of December, the word "Mayans" has trended on
Weibo as millions of normally phlegmatic Chinese speculate that the
end is nigh. "If the Mayans are right, I won’t pay my credit
card bill," was one popular post.
In
Shanghai, the police have had to issue a public warning about
doomsday. "The end of the world is a rumour," the police
said, in an internet post. "Do not believe it and do not be
swindled".
A
spokesman said they had handled 25 apocalypse-related cases in one
24-hour stretch. Most of the scam artists took advantage of credulous
pensioners, encouraging them to hand over their savings for one last
act of charity.
In
Nanjing, a 54-year-old university professor's wife took out a
£100,000 mortgage on her £300,000 home, saying she would donate the
money to underprivileged children, saying she hoped to "do
something meaningful before the world ended".
Last
month, a man in the far west province of Xinjiang made news when he
spent his life savings of £100,000 to build an ark for 20 people.
Lu
Zhenghai began building the 65ft ship in 2010. "When the time
comes, everyone can take refuge in it." However, as the deadline
approaches, Mr Lu has reportedly run out of cash to finish the boat.
He
said if the apocalypse failed to materialise, he would use the boat
to take tourists on sightseeing tours.
In
Chengdu, a web company has given its workers a tongue-in-cheek
two-day break on Dec 19 and 20. "We suggest you take advantage
of this 'final' time to spend more time with your closest family. We
wish everyone a meaningful doomsday," it said.
China
has no history of preoccupation with the apocalypse, and the current
wave of paranoia can be traced to the 2009 Hollywood disaster film
"2012". While the movie received a tepid welcome elsewhere,
it was a smash hit in China, as viewers were seduced by a plot that
saw the Chinese military build arks to save humanity.
Lu
Jiehua, a professor with the Department of Sociology at Peking
University, told the Global Times, meanwhile, that the paranoia
reflects a general anxiety running through Chinese society.
"This
panic buying [in Sichuan] not only shows people's fear of an upcoming
apocalypse, but also reflects their sense of uncertainty toward life
and society," he said.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.