Advertisement

11 arrested for tomb-raiding and selling women's corpses for 'ghost marriage' rituals

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
"Ghost marriages" are still practiced in some rural parts of China. Photo: Xinhua

Police in eastern China have arrested 11 people for their alleged roles in digging up dead women’s bodies which were then sold into ritual “ghost marriages”.

Advertisement

The suspects exhumed a woman’s body from a village grave in Shandong province in March and sold it to a middleman for 18,000 yuan (HK$22,760), Shandong Radio and Television reported.

The custom of ghost marriages requires a woman’s body be buried alongside a newly deceased bachelor so that he won’t be alone in the afterlife. It may date back to the 17th century BC and is mostly practised today in rural areas of Shaanxi, Shanxi, Henan, Hebei and Guangdong provinces.

The lead suspect, identified by the surname Wang, said the fresher the bodies, the more they were worth.

“Years-old carcasses are not worth a damn, while the ones that have just died, like this one, are valuable,” Wang said in a clip aired in the news broadcast, referring to the body of a woman unearthed three months after she was buried.

Advertisement

“They could be sold for somewhere between 16,000 and 20,000 yuan,” Wang said.

Advertisement