The Chinese government on Thursday announced new measures to
strengthen land management and stop excessive use of land for
construction and industrial projects.
The State Council decided at an executive meeting held Tuesday
that compensation for farmers whose land is compulsorily acquired
be raised to levels that allow them to maintain their living
standards and to guarantee their long-term rights and the
management of revenues from state-owned land-use rights be better
regulated, according to a statement from the meeting presided over
by Premier Wen Jiabao.
Previously held by local land departments, land transfer
revenues would become part of the local government budget, said the
statement.
Charges for land use rights and taxation on the use of land are
to be raised, and the government will also set up a standard for
minimum pricing of industrial land use rights and make the standard
public.
The central government will hold chief officials of local
governments responsible for land management and protection of
farmland within their jurisdictions, the statement said.
The central government will also strengthen law enforcement
pertaining to land management, and enhance supervision over local
governments and land administration departments. Violations of land
administration laws and regulations will be severely prosecuted and
made known to the public.
The State Council said that the measures are taken to stop
excessive use of land for construction and industrial projects,
check violations of laws and regulations in land requisitions, and
ban illegal requisition of farmland.
Other issues discussed at the meeting on Tuesday included an
energy consumption reduction plan for the second half of the year
and the employment target for the 2006 to 2010 period.
The government has vowed to create 45 million new jobs during
this period and keep the urban registered unemployment rate under
five percent.
(Xinhua News Agency July 28, 2006)
|