Beijing police has detained a man who attempted to burn the
portrait of late Chinese leader Chairman Mao Zedong that hangs
above the gate to the Forbidden City across the street from
Tian'anmen Square.
Gu Haiou, 35, a jobless man from Urumqi, capital of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, hurled a
self-made burning object to the portrait around 5:46 PM Saturday,
which caused a slight burnt mark in the lower left part of the
portrait, said the Beijing Public Security Bureau.
Gu arrived in Beijing at noon on Saturday, the bureau said.
He was once treated in a mental disease hospital in Urumqi last
year, it said.
Police are still interrogating the man.
The Tian'anmen Administration Committee will replace the damaged
portrait with a new one of the same version Saturday night, the
bureau said.
Armed police are guarding the area and visitors are forbidden to
enter the Forbidden City.
But the Tian'anmen Square is still open to visitors.
The portrait, six meters high, five meters wide and weighing
about two tons, is a reproduction of the fourth edition of Mao's
portrait that has hung at the historic spot since the Republic
of China was founded in 1949.
The first edition painted in 1949 showed Mao wearing a military
uniform and a cap. The second edition, hung between 1950 and 1952,
showed Mao in a green suit. The third edition, painted in the 1950s
by portraitist Zhang Zhenshi, was put up between 1953 and 1968.
(Xinhua News Agency May 13, 2007)