Understandably, the process has triggered numerous
complaints.
What has led to so many disputes is the country's
Administrative Regulation on Urban Housing Relocation - the constitutionality of
which is now being questioned by many legal experts, according to an article in
Beijing-based Caijing magazine.
In the renewal of old city areas, the tug-of-war between
protection of siheyuan, a traditional Chinese architecture of quadrangles, and
the attempt to erect new highrises has become the focus of public
opinion.
The renovation of Beijing's old city areas seems to be a
cultural issue.
"However, in recent years, I realized gradually that
protection of cultural relics has to depend on the weapon of law," Hua Xinmin, a
firm protector of siheyuan, was quoted by the magazine as
saying.
"But if siheyuan on the government's list of protection
are also private property, their protection is not only a cultural issue, but a
legal issue of private property protection."
Some residents involved in such disputes have cited the
rights protection articles in the Constitution, the Land Administration Law, the
Contract Law and the General Principles of Civil Law to safeguard their houses
and right of land use. In China, land is owned by the State and individuals may
only have the right of land use.
But the relocation authorities and relocation companies
also have their legal reference - the Administrative Regulation on Urban Housing
Relocation.
The regulation has been approved by the State Council and
took effect on November 1, 2001.
It stipulates that if a relocation agreement cannot be
reached between relocatees and relocators or among relocators, relocatees and
house tenants, it should be adjudicated by the department in charge of
relocation affairs. If the individuals involved refuse to accept the judgement,
he or she can file a suit to the court but the relocation can continue during
the process of suit.
Such a stipulation enables the administrative departments
to circumvent the court's power of law enforcement, the article quoted a judge
as saying.
The regulation also states if the relocatees and house
tenants have not moved out from houses to be renovated within the prescribed
time, the local government can empower related departments to pull down the
houses by force or apply to the court to do so.
The administrative departments are thus authorized with
the power of forcible relocation. And the relation between the administrative
departments and relocatees becomes unequal.
Besides relocatees' discontent, many legal experts say
the regulation can lead to infringement upon the rights of citizens, according
to the article.
Wang Weiguo, a professor from China University of
Politics and Law, said in the article the regulation gives the government or
even real estate developers the power of forcible relocation. It cannot
discipline the order of relocation and protect citizens' right but in reality
allows the government to use administrative power to violate citizens' private
rights.
Gao Zhisheng, a lawyer, cited the Contract Law to
question the regulation.
The contract signed between relocators and relocatees is
a civil contract and any administrative authority cannot deprive citizens of
their freedom to sign or not to sigh the contract, Gao said.
He said the regulation also goes against the
Constitution, the general principles of civil law.
The Constitution stipulates that citizens' property
rights should be defined by basic laws, which must be worked out by the National
People's Congress or its standing committee.
The regulation is an administrative regulation. Its legal
validity is inferior to the Constitution and other basic laws. Since the
regulation goes against the Constitution and other basic laws, it has lost the
legal basis for validity.
However, in real life, forcible relocations take place
from time to time while the court refuses to accept suits filed by dissatisfied
relocatees. Since 1995, more than 20,000 such cases in Beijing have been refused
by courts at various levels, the article said.
Shen Kui, a professor from Peking University, pointed out
in the article that the core issue is the incompleteness of China's basic law
framework.
In many cases, those laws only have general principles
without details for implementation. This leaves loopholes for administrative
departments to set up specific regulations to maximize their own interests, Shen
said.
Because the process of relocation involves huge
commercial interests, some administrative departments make use of legal
loopholes to garner benefit, the article said.
(China Daily )