The Ministry of Land and Resources is targeting the
municipal governments of Beijing and Xiamen, the northern province
of Hebei and the southeastern province of Fujian.
China's central government
has dispatched a team of inspectors to some provinces in an attempt
to put a stop to local government land grabs.
The Ministry of Land and Resources is targeting the
municipal governments of Beijing and Xiamen, the northern province
of Hebei and the southeastern province of Fujian.
"Empowered by the State Council, the inspectors will
supervise local land use and administration and advise local
governments to correct irregularities," said Gan Zangchun, the
country's deputy land inspector-general.
However, the inspectors are not authorized to exert
authority over local officials or interfere in their work,
according to Gan.
The central government approved the establishment of a
national inspection system to strengthen its control of local land
use in July. The move came in response to increasing discontent in
rural areas over arable land being expropriated by local
governments for development.
"The system will make sure the central government's
macro-control policies are effectively implemented by local
governments," said Cheng Chengbiao, director of the planning office
with the Department of Land and Resources of Fujian
Province.
In the first 11 months of the year, China saw real
estate investment rise 24 percent on the previous year to 1.64
trillion yuan (US$205 billion).
The government has issued new laws which will come
into effect on January 1, 2007 and regulate land sales, raise land
use taxes and compensation for people who have lost their land, and
order land administrators to double fees for new construction
projects.
However, local governments often help companies to get
round the macro-control policies, lending their support to illegal
investment projects in pursuit of economic growth.
Since 1999, local government involvement has been
responsible for 20 percent of the country's illegal land use cases,
involving 60 percent of the total land area which has been
exploited illegally.
The central government has sent officials to 12
provinces to whip local governments into line and defiant local
officials have been criticized and punished.
Earlier this month, a land official in Zhengzhou,
capital of central China's Henan Province, was sentenced to five
years in prison for taking bribes and approving irregular land
deals.
In September, a senior official from Henan Province
was sanctioned for failing to stop the construction of an
unapproved university campus occupying nearly 1,000 hectares of
land in Zhengzhou, the provincial capital.
In August, the central government criticized the Inner
Mongolia Autonomous Regional Government for failing to put a stop
to an unauthorized power station project.
"The efforts have contained the increase of
large-scale illegal land use and development, but have yet to
reverse the trend," said Chang Jiaxing, vice director of the Bureau
of Law Enforcement and Supervision with the Ministry.
"The situation will be improved remarkably if the
inspection system can curb the unlawful practices of local
governments," said Chang.
(China Daily December 18,
2006)
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