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Hong Kong

Kwun Tong alley shopkeepers stand their ground against URA

Kwun Tong alley business owners won't make way for project despite offers of compensation

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Cobbler Ho Kei-sing, 74, was not among those offered the option to bid for a market unit as his business is located just outside Yan Shun Lane. Photo: Nora Tam
Joyce Ng

Three months before a deadline to move out, 28 small businesses in a Kwun Tong alley stand in the way of the Urban Renewal Authority's biggest project ever.

The businesses, in their makeshift shops in Yan Shun Lane, are among the last holdouts in the Kwun Tong town centre redevelopment area.

Their negotiations with the authority are in a stalemate after they rejected an offer of help to rent space in several East Kowloon markets.

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They have also rejected being labelled "illegal occupants of government land", saying they built and bought the shops with their own hands and money. Most residents and shop owners in the area have accepted compensation and moved out.

The authority says it agrees that the lane businesses deserve special attention, but wants them out by June. "We are working hard to figure out a solution and to avoid a mass eviction," a spokesman said.

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The businesses, ranging from hairdressing to air-conditioner maintenance, have operated in the secluded alley for decades.

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