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Villages torn apart in rural niche rush

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The wreckers arrived one late July afternoon as Ko Shun took a nap. Awakened by the roar of an excavator and walls collapsing, the 80-year-old ran outside to discover her garden being ripped up and her half-century-old hut torn down.

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The man supervising the demolition was a village 'triad', she said.

'As I ran to the front to stop them, the man dragged me away saying, 'It's OK, you will be compensated with a lot of money.' My blouse was ripped and I fell to the ground.'

Today her garden in San Wai Tsuen, Yuen Long, lies under a cement road leading to The Shrine, a columbarium developed by listed company Aptus.

Ko's story is not uncommon. Many residents have found their homes under siege as entrepreneurs have launched a flurry of private columbarium projects in the last few years to try to cash in on a shortage of funeral niches for the 47,000 people who die in Hong Kong each year.

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Eddie Tse Sai-kit, convenor of the Columbarium Concern Group, said his organisation was helping more than half a dozen families who were being forced out of their homes. 'Strangers suddenly turn up and say, 'Your land belongs to us.' They show them the legal documents and even police cannot stop them,' Tse said.

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