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Shek O residents in final court battle to save homes

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DISGRUNTLED Shek O residents return to court tomorrow, fighting for their homes in a last-gasp battle with bureaucracy and bulldozers.

Daniel Yip Wai-lum is down to his last few legal bullets in a five-year feud with the Building Authority. He has spent $500,000 in legal fees to try to save the $2 million homestead he built in 1989 at the seaside village where his ancestors lived for generations before the British arrived.

Mr Yip has run afoul of local law by constructing a modern abode in Shek O without the necessary approval of the authority.

On Wednesday the authority posted notices of its intention to close and demolish the structure within days.

However, in an about-turn it has now decided to await the outcome of a lawsuit by tenant Gina Levy.

Ms Levy, who would be made homeless along with six other tenants by the closure, is due in Wan Chai Court tomorrow. She alleges that the closure would deprive tenants, including a single mother, of proper six-month notice in what amounts to a Building Authority eviction.

What won't be argued in court, according to lawyers and all participants, is the logic involved in destroying what they claim is one of the most structurally-sound buildings in Shek O.

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