>> ASIAONE / NEWS / LATEST NEWS / ASIA / STORY
China quake zone govt to sell luxury HQ after outcry
Thu, Jul 17, 2008
AFP

BEIJING, CHINA - THE capital of China's quake-hit Sichuan province has bowed to public pressure and will auction off its luxurious new government headquarters to aid the recovery effort, state media said on Thursday.

Proceeds from the sale of the controversial Chengdu city government building will go towards rehousing quake victims and for reconstruction, the China Youth Daily quoted He Huazhang, head of the Chengdu propaganda department, as saying.

The move follows a public outcry after rumours circulated online that government personnel began moving into the building just three days after the 8.0-magnitude earthquake shook Sichuan province on May 12, killing nearly 70,000 people.

The newspaper report said the move actually began at the end of April but the high cost of the building further angered Chinese netizens. The paper said it cost 1.2 billion yuan (S$237 million).

'All of a sudden it makes me lose hope in the current government,' one netizen wrote on popular web portal sina.com.

'I don't believe our national leaders didn't know about such a huge project. Pity the poor students who died in the earthquake.'

The deaths of thousands of children whose schools collapsed on top of them remains one of the most sensitive issues arising from the quake, and has led to accusations that corruption facilitated the use of shoddy materials.

The government building is located on 17 hectares of land, and measures 370,000 square metres, the China Youth Daily said.

'I think that what was behind this move of moving in and moving out so quickly was some internal self-examination, and the pressure of public opinion from outside,' the paper said in a separate commentary on the issue.

According to the Beijing News, the earthquake killed 4,304 people in Chengdu, and caused damage worth more than 120 billion yuan in the city alone. -- AFP

 

 
STORY INDEX
 
  China quake zone govt to sell luxury HQ after outcry
   
 
  Macau beefs up visa restrictions on mainland visitors
   
 
  Thai group says agrees to ceasefire in Muslim south
   
 
  Up to 10,000 Filipinos working illegally in Iraq
   
 
  US freezes arms sales to Taiwan
   
 
  Japan to seek more information on Anwar's arrest
   
 
  Deadly Asian conflicts rage as top security 'talk shop' meets
   
 
  Taiwan issues warnings as typhoon approaches
   
 
  Condom ads fall in S. Korea-Japan isle blow-up
   
 
  Hong Kong airport voted No. 1 for 7th year
   
We welcome contributions, comments and tips.
a1admin@sph.com.sg
   

Search: