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China farm reforms will seek to end land grabs: official

Agricultural Bank of China gets cash, IPO seen: report
Heavily indebted Agricultural Bank of China will get a 19-billion-dollar cash injection and be allowed to make internal reforms that could lead to a stock listing, state media reported Wednesday. The much-needed capital injection will come from Central Huijin Investment Co Ltd, a unit of China's 200-billion-dollar sovereign wealth fund, Xinhua news agency said. The investment will give Central Huijin Investment and the finance ministry each a 50 percent stake in the bank, it said. However the bank, one of China's four largest, also won long-awaited approval to restructure itself into a shareholding bank in a cabinet meeting Tuesday headed by Prime Minister Wen Jiabao, according to the China Daily. The reforms were expected to pave the way for an eventual stock market listing, it said, but no details or timetable were immediately available. The introduction of shareholders demanding a return for their investment would force the bank to start operating for profits -- a break from its role so far of supporting government policies, observers say. Years of lending to support government policies in rural areas has made the bank the worst performer among China's major state-owned lenders. It reported 817.97 billion yuan (120 billion dollars) in non-performing loans at the end of 2007, the paper added. The bank held assets of 6.05 trillion yuan at the end of 2007, when its operating profits reached 96 billion yuan for the year, the paper said. The Agricultural Bank of China employs 447,000 employees and operates 24,452 branches and sub-branches in China, it said. China's three other big state-owned commercial banks have all listed on the stock markets at home and abroad after going through similar reforms.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Oct 22, 2008
China said Wednesday a new rural farm policy was largely aimed at curbing illegal land grabs that have fuelled widespread discontent in the countryside.

China approved the major policy on October 12 to expand transfers of land-use rights held by farmers in a bid to boost rural incomes and maintain the nation's food security.

But a top official said a major thrust of the policy would be to protect peasants from being swindled or forced off land, a source of instability in the vast Chinese countryside.

"When land-use rights are circulated, it should be on a voluntary basis, we should not force or compel farmers to circulate land-use rights," said Chen Xiwen, a top financial and rural policy official in the Communist Party.

China sees tens of thousands of cases every year of poor farmers forced off their land for little or no compensation by developers seeking to expand industrial or residential projects.

Such incidents are a key factor in tens of thousands of protests, often violent, that erupt across China each year.

Chen acknowledged that poor farmers were at risk of manipulation due to ignorance over land regulations and that landless peasants were a stability risk.

"These people can be a source of instability," he told reporters.

He said China would have to come up with new guidelines and systems to protect the land rights of peasants, although he gave little insight into their potential shape.

"When farmers transfer their land rights this must be done voluntarily, through negotiations on an equal footing and with adequate compensation," he said, summarising the required protections.

He also sought to correct media reports -- including in China's state media -- saying the new policy gave farmers the power to trade, lease or transfer land-use rights for the first time.

Such rights were given years ago but only about five percent of land is "circulated" in this way, he said.

The government wanted to promote such land-use transactions because the migration of 220 million peasants to jobs in cities or coastal regions was leaving farmland underused, he said.

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UN urges China to revamp food safety after milk crisis
Beijing (AFP) Oct 22, 2008
China must modernise its food safety system, the United Nations said Wednesday, arguing an outdated and disjointed approach may have worsened a crisis over contaminated milk that killed four babies.







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