LISBON — From India’s Taj Mahal to Mexico’s
Mayan ruins, suggestions for seven new Wonders of the World have
flooded in from more than 60 million people in one of the
biggest global polls ever conducted.
With just over two weeks to go until the
result is announced, Tia Viering, spokeswoman for the
Zurich-based New 7 Wonders campaign, said on Wednesday: "We have
votes pouring in and are now one of the most popular Web sites
in the world."
National pride has played a role in the
contest’s widespread popularity, she told Reuters.
Politicians have seized the opportunity to
promote their national monuments in hopes of raising their
country’s profile and boosting tourism.
Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva
was seen embracing Rio de Janeiro’s Christ the Redeemer statue
after using his weekly radio address to pass on instructions on
how to vote for the landmark.
Students in some of China’s schools and
universities have campaigned for the Great Wall while Jordan’s
royal family has been lobbying for the rose-red desert city of
Petra.
The government of Peru encouraged its people
to vote for the ruined Inca city of Machu Picchu by setting up
free computer terminals, while Coca-Cola cans in Mexico carry
adverts calling on people to vote for the Mayan ruins of Chichen
Itza.
Mexico’s tourism board created a simulation
of the Mayan ruins in the virtual world of Second Life, which
has its own economy, currency, and more than 7 million
registered users, to lobby for votes in the competition.
The leading sites so far included the Taj
Mahal, the Coliseum in Rome, the Eiffel Tower in Paris and the
mysterious stone statues of Easter Island.
However, the contest has caused concern that
excessive tourism may threaten sites in countries such as Peru,
where the filming of a beer commercial several years ago damaged
an Inca artifact in Machu Picchu.
"There are some groups that have expressed
their concern about the contest but there is no such thing as
bad publicity," Viering said, adding that the worst fate for a
historical landmark was that it should be forgotten.
The Pyramids of Giza are the only one of
Seven Wonders of the ancient world still standing.
The organization conducting the poll was set up by
Swiss-Canadian adventurer Bernard Weber. The results will be
announced in Portugal’s Benfica Stadium of Light on July 7.
—Reuters