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Premier Urges to Tighten Land Management
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Premier Wen Jiabao urged local governments and departments concerned to tighten land management and implement the decision of the State Council on in-depth reform concerning the strict land management in Beijing Thursday.

Wen made the remarks in Beijing at a teleconference on strict land management of the State Council, chaired by Chinese Vice-Premier Zeng Peiyan.

Since the second half of last year, the central government adopted a series of measures on strict land management aiming to strengthen macro-economic control and protect arable land, Wen said.

The local governments and departments concerned have made achievements in implementing the decision of the central government and curbing misuse of land, he said.

The practice has proved the decision is necessary to protect arable land and safeguard grain security, he said, stressing that the decision is crucial to promotion of a steady and rapid economic development as it has effectively curbed blind investment and duplicated construction.

However, land management should be further tightened since the achievements scored in land management is still at the primary stage and misuse of land has not been eradicated, he said.

To tighten land management is vital to grain security and sustainable economic and social development," he stressed.

Wen underscored that the government at various levels should spare no effort to protect the existing arable land especially the farmland from shrinking.

The government should improve the implementation of the relevant laws, regulations and supervision, and those violated land use laws should be strictly punished," he said.

He stressed effective efforts should be made to protect the farmers' rights for land use and to guarantee that those farmers who lose their land should be compensated.

Meanwhile, intensive land use should be advocated to prevent existing land being left unused, he said.

Wen stressed the governments at various levels should fulfill their obligations of land management, adding "whether arable land is well protected or not is a yardstick to evaluate the performance of local governments and their officials."

(Xinhua News Agency October 29, 2004)

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