Dubai Telegraph - Hong Kong mega development plan to devour villages, wetlands

EUR -
AED 4.304535
AFN 74.415645
ALL 95.657107
AMD 433.266248
ANG 2.097923
AOA 1075.987332
ARS 1632.462783
AUD 1.618609
AWG 2.10978
AZN 1.995685
BAM 1.95696
BBD 2.355816
BDT 143.515066
BGN 1.955182
BHD 0.442264
BIF 3480.663113
BMD 1.1721
BND 1.493585
BOB 8.08179
BRL 5.777048
BSD 1.169703
BTN 111.388975
BWP 15.895422
BYN 3.311291
BYR 22973.155008
BZD 2.352414
CAD 1.593832
CDF 2713.410971
CHF 0.915931
CLF 0.026961
CLP 1061.125158
CNY 8.005851
CNH 7.994049
COP 4354.596695
CRC 532.117675
CUC 1.1721
CUP 31.060643
CVE 110.330397
CZK 24.387118
DJF 208.285235
DKK 7.472581
DOP 69.691606
DZD 155.219479
EGP 62.848343
ERN 17.581496
ETB 184.078001
FJD 2.563206
FKP 0.866016
GBP 0.863679
GEL 3.153155
GGP 0.866016
GHS 13.111772
GIP 0.866016
GMD 85.5636
GNF 10265.084482
GTQ 8.926425
GYD 244.705045
HKD 9.184562
HNL 31.091562
HRK 7.536132
HTG 153.080736
HUF 361.208245
IDR 20385.100166
ILS 3.445502
IMP 0.866016
INR 111.392962
IQD 1535.450666
IRR 1542483.264488
ISK 143.183982
JEP 0.866016
JMD 184.059098
JOD 0.831057
JPY 185.02061
KES 151.059928
KGS 102.465547
KHR 4691.780986
KMF 492.899268
KPW 1054.893514
KRW 1708.523207
KWD 0.360983
KYD 0.974686
KZT 543.506793
LAK 25685.443819
LBP 104960.575553
LKR 374.295051
LRD 214.629049
LSL 19.57457
LTL 3.460905
LVL 0.708991
LYD 7.420462
MAD 10.810308
MDL 20.188138
MGA 4875.934547
MKD 61.666821
MMK 2461.06562
MNT 4194.484409
MOP 9.441277
MRU 46.704082
MUR 55.029953
MVR 18.11485
MWK 2028.202188
MXN 20.298431
MYR 4.633318
MZN 74.895135
NAD 19.57457
NGN 1600.967936
NIO 43.028082
NOK 10.812432
NPR 178.221398
NZD 1.974344
OMR 0.450665
PAB 1.169693
PEN 4.100631
PGK 5.086015
PHP 71.917685
PKR 325.951694
PLN 4.24541
PYG 7087.261339
QAR 4.27424
RON 5.239167
RSD 117.373693
RUB 88.494306
RWF 1710.213705
SAR 4.397511
SBD 9.414608
SCR 16.200818
SDG 703.844816
SEK 10.812479
SGD 1.492646
SHP 0.875091
SLE 28.862896
SLL 24578.341116
SOS 668.496242
SRD 43.92678
STD 24260.098268
STN 24.514531
SVC 10.234153
SYP 129.553035
SZL 19.570266
THB 38.077418
TJS 10.936276
TMT 4.10821
TND 3.386779
TOP 2.822135
TRY 53.020046
TTD 7.928767
TWD 36.943993
TZS 3044.157544
UAH 51.401968
UGX 4415.617294
USD 1.1721
UYU 47.088068
UZS 14094.499388
VES 578.424145
VND 30857.869995
VUV 138.92257
WST 3.183342
XAF 656.34604
XAG 0.015522
XAU 0.000252
XCD 3.167658
XCG 2.107967
XDR 0.816284
XOF 655.789907
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.674102
ZAR 19.389753
ZMK 10550.300729
ZMW 22.077274
ZWL 377.41564
  • CMSD

    0.0400

    23.29

    +0.17%

  • CMSC

    0.0099

    22.88

    +0.04%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    13.04

    +0.84%

  • RBGPF

    0.0800

    63.18

    +0.13%

  • RIO

    1.8700

    100.5

    +1.86%

  • NGG

    0.1400

    87.64

    +0.16%

  • BCC

    -2.2000

    72.13

    -3.05%

  • RELX

    -0.2000

    36.16

    -0.55%

  • BCE

    0.1700

    24.1

    +0.71%

  • RYCEF

    0.1500

    16.5

    +0.91%

  • GSK

    -0.5200

    50.38

    -1.03%

  • BTI

    1.0500

    59.4

    +1.77%

  • BP

    -0.4400

    46.5

    -0.95%

  • VOD

    -0.3100

    15.74

    -1.97%

  • AZN

    -2.2200

    181.24

    -1.22%

Hong Kong mega development plan to devour villages, wetlands
Hong Kong mega development plan to devour villages, wetlands / Photo: Peter PARKS - AFP

Hong Kong mega development plan to devour villages, wetlands

For almost half a century, Kwok Hoi-yin's humble cottage on Hong Kong's border with mainland China was surrounded by leagues of fishponds and green fields, buffering the modern highrises of megacity Shenzhen to the north.

Text size:

In recent years his village has shrunk, nibbled away by roads and bridges as the government claims land for crossborder infrastructure and its Northern Metropolis project, an ambitious plan to urbanise the border area that has proceeded despite concerns from locals and environmentalists.

Kwok's bucolic idyll, near the city's largest and most important wetlands, is long gone.

Instead the view from his window is a grey stone wall, while an army of mosquitoes rises from the dead water remaining under his hut.

"To put it politely we are sacrificing for the greater good, but to put it less politely, we have been sliced off, piece by piece," Kwok, 69, told AFP.

His 100-year-old village, Ha Wan Tsuen, might now be wiped out entirely.

In September the government approved a plan to create an enormous new tech zone that will eventually swallow it up.

"We hope they won't tear down our village -- that's our most genuine but also most impossible wish," Kwok, who has served as Ha Wan Tsuen's elected chief for a decade, said.

"Because it's impossible for us to resist the government -- it would be like a praying mantis trying to stop a chariot."

- 90 percent opposition -

Commonly known as the San Tin Technopole, the planned tech zone is the cherry on top of the Northern Metropolis.

It will be the "core of industry development", according to the government, providing a third of the Metropolis' promised 500,000 new jobs.

The wider project -- which aims to deepen integration with mainland China -- is set to transform 30,000 hectares of land along the border, about a third of Hong Kong's territory.

The Metropolis will house 2.5 million people, the government says.

But those who already call the area home, like Kwok, had little chance to put their concerns about the development directly to the government.

The last chance for ordinary people to speak out was a four-day hearing held by the Town Planning Board in the summer.

A two-month consultation period before the hearing had resulted in a 90 percent opposition rate from about 1,600 submissions -- but the board still gave the project a green light.

An evacuation date for Ha Wan Tsuen has not yet been set, nor has compensation.

The government has also dismissed concerns over the project's environmental impact.

The Technopole will push up against a large protected wetland area, which has been UNESCO-recognised since 1995.

The area around those wetlands -- around 2,600 hectares of fishponds, rivers and marshes -- had been designated by the Hong Kong government as a conservation and buffer zone, to limit development and preserve a complete eco-system.

- 'Wetland damages' -

The Technopole will take over 240 hectares of those zones, the government has admitted.

"Over the past 30 years Hong Kong never had a development plan that would cause wetland damages in such a scale," Wong Suet-mei, a conservation officer of the Hong Kong Bird Watching Society, told AFP.

The government says most of the wetlands that will be affected have already changed beyond recognition.

It says it will establish a wetland conservation park as "compensation", along with other measures such as keeping a 300-metre flight path for birds.

"Based on the previous experience in ecological compensation in other development projects, we are confident that the number of bird numbers will be maintained at the current level or even increase," the Development Bureau told AFP.

Chan Kwok-sun, an aquafarmer whose almost 40-year-old ponds are set to be filled in for the Technopole, remained doubtful.

"No one can farm fish when the ponds are taken, no bird will come when there is no fish for them," Chan told AFP.

The 74-year-old farmer said he welcomed the government's development plan though, as he has witnessed the rise of Shenzhen from "pure darkness like in primitive times" to "a mountain of skyscrapers".

However, he said he would stay among his ponds until the last day possible.

"I live an unfettered life here," Chan said. "It's hard to find it elsewhere."

I.Viswanathan--DT