A senior official yesterday called for unity with villagers
affected by the ban on backyard poultry, saying removal of fowls
was a crucial part of the government's plan to protect public
health against avian flu.
In an attempt to pre-empt a legal battle with villagers and
defuse the tension among them, the official appealed to them to
understand that it was in the common good of all to join hands to
keep the health threat at bay.
The appeal came as Heung Yee Kuk - the umbrella organization of
the territory's villages - raised its rhetoric that it was ready to
wage a war in court unless officials agreed to compensate villagers
for the heads of poultry they had seized. He made the remarks while
visiting a Sun Tin villager whose 300 chickens were seized by
Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department (AFCD) officials
on Thursday. The villager had reportedly been rearing the chickens
illegally.
Last week, the government declared none could raise poultry in
the backyard without a license from Monday. Earlier, no license was
required for less than 20 heads of poultry. The owners were asked
to either hand over the poultry to AFCD or risk being raided by
officials for their seizure. Also, the government ruled out any
compensation for the villagers, saying the rural areas'
infrastructure would be improved instead.
Kuk Chairman Lau Wong-fat said they would move court next week
for a judicial review of the government's ban without compensating
owners for their loss of backyard poultry.
It is against the Basic Law not to compensate villagers for the
loss, the Kuk reiterated, because Article 105 says the government
had the obligation to protect the right of a person to compensation
for lawful deprivation of his property.
The official, speaking as a government spokesperson, however,
sounded confident that the ban without compensation conformed to
the Basic Law, though the administration didn't want the case to
end up in court.
She said: "Hong Kong is a free society and everybody is free to
seek redress in court. Should that be the case, it would be up to
the court to decide."
She reminded that the government had been trying to protect
public health. "Let us remember most of the human infection cases
reported overseas and in the mainland were related to backyard
poultry."
She promised that the government would continue to communicate
with the Kuk to remove any misunderstanding, and hoped that the
government's relationship with villagers would not suffer.
Officials had once considered compensating the owners, she said,
but dropped the idea after being convinced that doing so would be
contrary to the policy objective of removing all backyard poultry
speedily. "Had we taken that option, there was a very good chance
for the exercise to be bogged down in compensation negotiations,"
she said.
Referring to the Sun Tin case, another government spokesman said
they were studying whether to prosecute the man who had kept 300
chickens.
In a related development, Food and Environmental Hygiene
Department (FEHD) officials shut down an illegal
poultry-slaughterhouse in Yuen Long yesterday.
Acting on tips, FEHD officials raided the factory at Kai Pak
Leng in Lau Fau Shan around 5:30 AM. About 1,000 live chickens were
seized from the temporary structure in addition to 80 that had
already been slaughtered.
A man was arrested and, if found guilty of operating an
unlicensed food factory, faced a maximum fine of up to HK$50,000
and six months' jail.
(China Daily HK edition February 20, 2006)