China to save its oldest cliff Buddha from collapse

Datong, China - China's oldest cliff-carved Buddha statue is to be saved from collapse, with a $10.8m (£6.6m) facelift, a state-run news agency has reported.

Found by a farmer in 2005, the 1,459-year-old statue was carved on Meng Mountain near Taiyuan, Shanxi province.

But the huge form was now in danger of collapsing into abandoned coal mines, Xinhua news agency said.

Seven coal mines in the area had been closed in 2007 to protect the ancient stone statue, Xinhua said.

Photos of the statue that tourists have posted on websites show the massive form nestled on a steep, wooded hillside.

China's Ministry of Land Resources said the mountain slopes would now be stabilised and cracks on the statue sealed.

Shanxi province produced almost a quarter of China's coal, Xinhua said. But the industry has caused major environmental damage.

People in the villages around the Buddha statue now hoped to attract more tourists to the site, an official in Taiyuan said.

Shanxi province is also home to the cliff Buddhas at Yungang, outside the city of Datong, another major coal-mining centre.