Hung Shui Kiu villagers in Hong Kong may receive alternative farmland near current homes
Government officials consider move to ease concerns of Hung Shui Kiu villagers
Farmers facing eviction from the northwestern New Territories area of Hung Shui Kiu will hopefully be offered land in neighbouring areas so they can continue farming, a planning official has said.
Five villages are set to be razed as the government plans to turn the 714 hectares of Hung Shui Kiu - a place now dominated by rural villages and open storage facilities - into a new town with high-rise housing and commercial developments.
The number of farmers to be displaced has not been determined yet, but Amy Cheung Yi-mei, assistant director of planning, held out hope for suitable resettlement at a public forum attended by more than 200 people yesterday.
"We hope to adopt the northeastern New Territories model, that is to identify sites nearby for affected farmers to resume their agricultural activities," she said.
Under the northeastern New Territories plan, the government will take over 22 hectares of active agricultural land in Kwu Tung North and Fanling North to build residential and commercial blocks.
In return, 34 hectares of fallow farmland has been identified in Kwu Tung South for affected farmers.