The Chinese capital vowed to revamp "urban villages" with filthy
and disorderly surroundings and poor sanitation, Xinhua News Agency
reported.
The slum-like urban villages, enclosed by skyscrapers and highways,
came into being during the city's rapid expansion in the late
1980s. They are the forgotten corners in the course of social and
economic development.
As
the city is busy preparing itself to host the 2008 Olympic Games,
the renovation of urban villages has been placed at the top of the
government work agenda.
A
detailed plan was released on Monday, during the mayor's working
conference, to give a thorough facelift to more than 170 urban
villages in the next three years, says the report.
These villages, covering an area of nearly 7 million square meters,
account for half of the city's total urban villages. They are
located near Olympic venues or within the Fourth Ring Road.
The second phase of the renovation project is expected to start
after 2008 for other half, says the report.
The urban villages of Beijing are divided into two
categories.
The first includes the areas enclosed by the established urban
area. There are 231 such hamlets scattered in eight urban districts
of Beijing and usually located in the downtown business area, along
railway lines and in large-scale factories such as the Capital Iron
and Steel Group.
The second category includes 112 administrative villages -
grassroots administrative units consisting of one or more hamlets -
located in border areas of towns and counties.
Most of the 343 urban villages are in three districts of Beijing,
including the eastern district of Chaoyang, northwestern district
of Haidian and southwestern district of Fengtai.
The municipal government has worked out different renovation
policies based on the various conditions of the villages, says the
report.
If
the land use rights have been sold for more than two years and the
developer has let the area lay idle, the government will recover
the land.
If
it is less than two years, the government will set a deadline for
the land user to begin construction and may provide
subsidies.
As
to the areas without any real estate projects, the municipal
government and the district governments will work together to
resettle the people there, most of whom are migrant workers, and
demolish the shabby buildings.
(China Daily September 30, 2004)
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