BEIJING, July 12 (Xinhua) -- China's land control
authorities Thursday named four local governments who have been ordered to
rectify illegal arable land use situations and pledged not to be soft or
tolerant of any shirking of duties.
They are the Beijing Municipal
government, the provincial governments of Henan and Yunnan and the Dalian City
government.
Xu Shaoshi, the state land inspector general who
doubles as the minister of Land and Resources, said all four governments have
taken immediate actions to straighten out their problems.
The problems included acquiescing in land
expropriation without actual approval, encouraging the leasing of farm land to
get round the ban on confiscation and revising land use plans to erode the area
of farm land.
Responding to the ministry, the Beijing Municipal
government carried out a check and detected 442 illegal land use cases involving
a total area of 1,053 hectares, more than half of which was arable land.
The Henan Provincial government revoked its prior
approval of the land use application of Henan Fengshen Tyre Company supported by
Jiangzuo City government and returned the 26.7 hectares of farmland occupied to
farmers. Three other similar violations were detected.
The Yunnan Provincial government reclaimed 4.4
hectares of farmland from the Qujing City Government who illegally expropriated
the land for the construction of a vocational education center. The project has
been banned after the Qujing City government submitted a written self-criticism
to the provincial government. Atotal of 2,034 illegal land use cases have been
uncovered in the province since 2005 involving an aggregate land area of 655
hectares.
The Dalian City government responded by initiating an
investigation which exposed 879 hectares of land misused without prior
authorization.
"These cases are not exceptional. Quite a number of
city and county government acquiesced, countenanced or even pulled the strings
behind deals involving the illegal use of arable land," said Xu Shaoshi at a
press conference in Beijing.
He warned that land inspectors would use all possible
means--legal, administrative, economic or technical-- to catch violators. He
added that the land use quota of local governments cited in these cases would be
reduced for the following year.
"We will not let them get an unfair advantage", he
said.
The world's most populous nation faces a severe farm
land shortage. At the end of 2006, its arable land declined from 2005's122
million hectares to 121.8 million hectares, only a stone's throw away from the
official bottom line of 120 million hectares.
The central government has pledged to adopt very
strict land control but some local governments obsessed with economic growth
still break laws and brutally sacrifice the interests of farmers.
"The number of land misuse cases is going down, but
the problem is far from being eradicated," Xu said.
Between January and May, China investigated 24,245
illegal land use cases, down 3.6 percent year-on-year, involving 14,667
hectares, down 12.14 percent year-on-year.
Ninety-nine commercial bribery crimes relating to
land use have been uncovered worth a combined 43.3 million yuan (about 5.85
million U.S. dollars). Sixty-six people received criminal sentences, with
another 37 getting Party or administrative disciplinary penalties.
Chinese Vice Premier Zeng Peiyan has urged local
governments and individuals to provide and gather accurate land data in the
second national land survey that began on July 1st as up-to-date and accurate
land data would bolster the government's tough land control measures and
safeguard the arable land minimum.
"The central government will tolerate no cheating or
changing data," he has warned.
Sources with the Ministry of Supervision and Land and
Resources have required their provincial departments to submit monthly reports
on their latest inspection results and the response of local governments.
They say that a new land inspection storm is brewing
as the land use overhaul will be strengthened at grass-root levels, with the
focus at government officials flouting regulations to approve illegitimate land
use and the transfer of use rights for state-owned lands at cheaper costs.
According to a joint statement released by both
ministries on Thursday, major leaders of local governments are to be held full
responsible for perpetrations within their jurisdiction and required to provide
full support to land inspectors and to respond quickly to problems.
The ministries urged local governments to "turn their
head" to review the illegal land use cases uncovered between January 2005 and
September 2006 to make sure past problems were rectified and perpetrators were
penalized in line with law.
No organizations or individuals are allowed to hide
or shelter land misuse cases.