The Free Press Journal

Men can build house for free in rural Hong Kong

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Sitting in the spacious courtyard of an 18th-century ancestral hall belonging to his clan, William Liu defiantly rejects a lucrative birthright that his special status as one of Hong Kong's male indigenous villagers affords him.

Liu hails from the rural northern part of Hong Kong known as the "New Territorie­s" which were leased by Britain from China in 1898.

Under a colonial-era policy that remains in place, any male who can trace his lineage back to that period has the right to build a threestore­y house on his land without paying a land fee.

In a city with the world's least affordable property market, that exclusivel­y male right is a major windfall.

But it is being challenged in the courts as both discrimina­tory to women and unfair to millions of Hong Kongers unable to get on the property ladder.

Liu is a villager who agrees with the court case against the building rights.

"It's an unfair policy and I will not use it," the 22-yearold told AFP.

Liu, a democracy activist, is opposed both to the discrimina­tory nature of the policy and the way the city's connected housing developers have still been able to use it to build properties.

"The small house policy has turned into something that is just being abused by a small handful of people working with developers to make money," he explained.

Liber Research Community, a local land concern group, estimates that at least one out of four indigenous houses in the New Territorie­s have been built illegally, with commercial developers making secret deals with villagers to use their land rights.

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