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China reaffirms relocation of another 4m due to labour demands
BEIJING—Another 4 million
people would be relocated in southwest China’s Chongqing Municipality
not because of the Three Gorges Dam but due to labor demands in the
city, said an official in charge of the dam construction on Tuesday.
Wang Xiaofeng, director of the office of the Three Gorges Project
Committee of the State Council, told a press conference here about 4
million people would be moved from rural to urban areas in Chongqing in
support of “local industrial restructuring and labor transformation”. It
is not the first time China has denied any relation between the vast
relocation and the Three Gorges Project.
A Chongqing government spokesman earlier this month denied media reports
that another four million people would be relocated because of
environmental problems caused by the Three Gorges project. Wen Tianping,
the spokesman, stressed that the plan to encourage millions to leave
their homes was part of a wider urbanization drive and was not a forced
relocation. “The municipality aims to attract three to four million
people from rural to urban areas by 2020 to narrow the urban-rural
wealth gap,” Wen said.
According to Wang, by September 2007 China had relocated 1.22 million
people for the Three Gorges Project, built 45.83 million square meters
of housing and moved more than 1,570 industrial enterprises. “China has
a particular relocation issue when it comes to gigantic hydropower
projects, since it is the most populous country in the world. The
20-billion-dollar Itaipu Hydropower Plant on the border between Brazil
and Paraguay only needed to relocate all together 90,000 people in the
two countries,” Wang said. “The Chinese government has shown great
concern for the migrants and hopes to bring them a stable and affluent
life in the future,” Wang said.
So far, the State Council has approved the allocation of 52.9 billion
yuan (7.15 billion U.S. dollars) to subsidize people moving out of the
reservoir area, he said. “We also encouraged other provinces and cities
to help the development of their resettlement area and the support funds
from them had reached 34.1 billion yuan (4.6 billion U.S. dollars) by
the end of last year,” he said.
All the money has been used directly on migrants, including relocation
compensations, an annual allowance of 600 yuan for each migrant from
rural areas and investment in roads, schools, hospitals and other
constructions around their new homes, he said. —Xinhua
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