Most of the 14,901 residents that have made way for Olympic
venues such as the Bird's Nest and Water Cube have resettled in
nearby buildings with government aid, a senior Beijing official
said yesterday.
"No one was forced out of their homes," Zhang Jiaming, a senior
official working closely with construction projects for the Games, told reporters.
Altogether, more than 6,000 families were relocated to make room
for seven Olympic sites in the capital, official figures show. They
included more than 4,600 families in the Wabian and Wali villages,
where major Olympic venues are clustered.
Most of the villagers bought homes in residential areas close to
the Fourth and Fifth Ring Roads, where properties cost about 4,000
and 6,000 yuan ($559 and $839) per square meter in 2002, when the
relocation started.
"The top priority for us is to guarantee those relocated have
access to affordable housing," Zhang, vice-director of the Beijing
Municipal Construction Committee, said.
People living near the Bird's Nest told China Daily the
government-assigned developers paid the required compensation and
affected residents moved out of their homes within a month in late
2002. There were no "nail houses", or people who refused to leave,
Na Heli, a former resident, said.
About 4,500 people were relocated to make room for the baseball
and basketball compounds at Wukesong, and the badminton domes at a
university in the southeast of the city, officials said.
Local media have reported the city will improve living
conditions in more than 170 urban villages, or poor housing for
migrant labors around Beijing, before the Games.
A foreign ministry spokeswoman said last year that not a single
family was forced to move outside Beijing during the Olympic
relocation project.
The construction of Olympic venues is in line with the master
plan for Beijing and the venues will later open to the public,
Zhang said.
(China Daily February 20, 2008)