Tianjin Blast China property developers to buy back homes
https://triment.blogspot.com/2015/08/tianjin-blast-china-property-developers.html
People whose apartments were damaged in explosions in the northeastern Chinese port city of Tianjin can sell their homes to a group of property developers or choose to have the government renovate them, the official Xinhua news agency said.
Hundreds
of residents had protested demanding compensation in the wake of the
blasts that killed at least 150 people at a hazardous chemicals
warehouse earlier in August.
Some apartment
buildings were closer to the warehouse than allowed by Chinese
regulations dealing with the storage of dangerous materials, and public
anger surged among those who believed authorities neglected to properly
police the firm that ran the facility, Tianjin Dongjiang Port Ruihai International Logistics Co Ltd.
Several
property developers said they had formed an alliance to buy back homes
from owners, Xinhua said on Sunday, citing the housing administration in
Tianjin's Binhai area.
The "alliance's
repurchase price will be the higher of the market price before the blast
or the price at which residents bought their homes", Xinhua said, adding that homeowners would still be eligible for additional compensation.
An "independent third party agency"
will determine the pre-blast market price of the homes and the value of
damaged goods inside, Xinhua said. Those whose homes had not yet been
delivered by developers can opt for a "resettlement allowance".
When asked for a comment, China Vanke Co Ltd
, the country's largest property developer, said only homes not yet
delivered to homeowners will be offered a buyback while those that have
already been delivered will only get free renovation and compensation.
China
Vanke had earlier said about 5,000 residential units at three of its
developments were affected by the blasts and that it would work with the
government to settle any compensation for homeowners.
Thousands
of people had been evacuated from around the blast site in Tianjin as
information emerged about the potentially deadly chemicals stored at the
warehouse.
Many residents in buildings close to
the blasts had expressed concern about potential long-term health
effects, though government officials had repeatedly said environmental
standards in the blast area were "basically guaranteed".
In
a separate report, Xinhua said Chinese police had punished 197 people
for spreading "online rumours" about recent incidents, including the
Tianjin explosions, China's stock market slump, and "seditious" comments
about upcoming 70-year commemorations of the end of World War Two.