Call to block 'fung shui bridge' amid claims of land grab
Lawmakers have called for the government to revoke its approval of a plan to build a 'fung shui bridge' in a Tai Lam Country Park village.
The call came after revelations of a land grab by the chief of Kap Lung village, Tsang Hin-keung, and a company of which he is the director.
Tsang wants to widen a footbridge so that it can take vehicles.
He claims this is compensation for the disruption to fung shui caused by tunnelling work for the Hong Kong-Shenzhen-Guangzhou express rail link being carried out a kilometre away.
A special government working group in November approved Tsang's application to widen the bridge in principle.
But land searches have found Tsang - who is also chairman of the Pat Heung Rural Committee - has bought more than one-third of the land in the village.
The searches show Tsang owns 14 of the total of 40 land lots in the village. One of them is jointly owned by Tsang and another man. Thirteen of the lots have been bought by Tsang's company, Wealth Hill International Investment, since 2007.