The Borneo Post (Sabah)

No visas for foreigners to live in Johor giant Forest City — Dr M

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KUALA LUMPUR: Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad yesterday declared that foreigners will not be granted visas to live in the giant Forest City real estate project on the country’s southern tip, a major threat to the marketing strategy for the developmen­t.

It is not his first broadside against the plan by Chinese developer Country Garden Holdings Co to create a new city that was envisaged to eventually house 700,000 people on reclaimed land near Singapore, but it could be his most damaging.

The company has been targeting foreigners more than Malaysians for sales of the apartments.

A top official at the project told Reuters last week that in the weeks immediatel­y after 93-year-old Dr Mahathir came back into power, through a shock election victory in May, demand for the apartments had weakened, and that the uncertaint­y remained a concern.

His latest comments are likely to exacerbate those concerns.

“One thing is certain, that city that is going to be built cannot be sold to foreigners,” Dr Mahathir said at a news conference on Monday in Kuala Lumpur in response to a question from Reuters. “We are not going to give visas for people to come and live here.”

Dr Mahathir, who was Malaysia’s leader from 1981-2003, said the government’s objection was “because it was built for foreigners, not built for Malaysians. Most Malaysians are unable to buy those flats.”

A Country Garden official said the company didn’t immediatel­y have a response to Dr Mahathir’s attack. Forest City didn’t have an immediate comment.

Country Garden Chinese buyers now make up about two-thirds of the owners of the Forest City apartments that have been sold so far, with 20 per cent fromMalays­ia and the rest from 22 other countries including Indonesia, Vietnam and South Korea.

Dr Mahathir had capitalise­d on popular disquiet about Chinese investment pouring into Malaysia during his election campaign. He even suggested in a speech last December that he hoped Forest City would become an actual forest with baboons and monkeys as residents, according to local media reports.

Since becoming prime minister he has put the brakes on a number of China-backed projects, including the US$20 billion (RM81.9 billion) East Coast Rail Link project and a natural gas pipeline project in Sabah. Plans for a high speed rail link from Kuala Lumpur to Singapore, which was expected to be a big boost to the Forest City project, have also been suspended.

Forest City’s sales have picked back up in recent weeks, and the developer has been seeking to change the project’s image. Country Garden is trying to make it appear more Malaysian and less Chinese, according to the official, Ng Zhu Hann, who is head of strategy for Country Garden Forest City.

Country Garden is also willing to acknowledg­e for the first time that if demand does falter it will have to slow down the building of the developmen­t. It is eventually intended to be a US$100 billion city, with apartment blocks, houses, office towers, hotels and shopping centres on four manmade islands.

“If the demand is there, we will build. If it’s not there, we will slow down,” Ng said in an interview at the gleaming Phoenix Hotel, one of the finished new structures on the first of the reclaimed islands. “So there’s no worry of a ghost town, oversupply — if the demand is not there, we won’t be building.”

Dr Mahathir’s victory is the second big threat that the developmen­t — which is a partnershi­p between Country Garden and the Sultan of Johor — has faced in the past couple of years. Beijing’s moves to stem capital outflows imposed after the yuan plummeted in late 2016 hurt mainland Chinese demand for the apartments.

Ng said what he called the “Chinese Stigma” is the biggest hurdle facing the project.

“What the Malaysian government does not want is a Chinese enterprise coming to Malaysia, taking government contracts, affecting the project opportunit­ies of local developers, making the money and going back,” Ng said.

This has prompted a change in hiring strategy as Forest City seeks to recruit more Malaysians like Ng into senior management positions.

“My predecesso­r was a Chinese. In the past, our management had only one Malaysian, which was head of legal. This (my) position is usually held by a Chinese, but now I’m here,” said Ng, who is ethnic Chinese but from Malaysia.

Ng said that the political uncertaint­y had hurt investor sentiment.

“It’s not that people don’t want to invest, but people are now: ‘Let’s wait and see. What if they change their policy again?’ Political stability is one, policy stability is another.”

At the end of a thirty-minute drive from the crossing from Singapore through palm oil plantation­s and jungle, the once sleepy town of Gelang Patah known for its mangroves and fishing villages now has a skyline of skyscraper­s.

This futuristic developmen­t is only half of the first of four man-made islands envisioned for the developmen­t — only 2.7 square kilometres of the planned reclamatio­n of 20 square kilometres.

Work to build more high rise residentia­l towers, town houses and commercial buildings is continuing full steam, with dozens of heavy duty trucks carrying sand and materials while cranes dot a skyline that is growing taller and denser as high-rise apartments rapidly approach completion.

Forest City is barely inhabited, with only a handful of staff living at its service apartments and guests at its hotel. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Forest City’s sales have picked back up in recent weeks, and the developer has been seeking to change the project’s image. Country Garden is trying to make it appear more Malaysian and less Chinese. — Reuters pic
Forest City’s sales have picked back up in recent weeks, and the developer has been seeking to change the project’s image. Country Garden is trying to make it appear more Malaysian and less Chinese. — Reuters pic

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