Beijing: The legacy of Chairman Mao Zedong continues to inspire his supporters four decades after his death, with a giant gold-painted statue of China’s Communist Party founder at the cost of a whopping USD 4.6 lakh.
The 36 metre-high statute made up of concrete and steel has been installed in an open countryside in Tongxu county near Kaifeng in the central Henan province by farmers and local entrepreneurs who funded its construction. Villagers said many tourists had come to have their photographs taken with the landmark, Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post reported Wednesday.
While China during his period struggled with high rates of poverty, it moved away from his hardline ideology with a broad range of economic reforms, carried out by his successor Deng Xiaoping, which were largely credited for achieving record economic growth, catapulting it to become the world’s second largest economy.
Yuan Yuhua, a Maoist and self-educated scholar, said supporters of Mao’s political ideas were increasingly viewed with suspicion by the authorities. “Most Maoist gatherings in other places are suppressed, causing more leftists to come here,” he said. “In the past two years, leftist gatherings to commemorate Mao have dwindled, in part due to official interference,” the Post quoted him as saying. Mao died on September 9, 1976 at the age of 82.