Putrajaya gives no guarantee to KL landowners in MRT row

Ahmad pronounced buildings in Chinatown will not be torn down to have approach for a MRT. File pic

KUALA LUMPUR, October 13 Putrajaya betrothed currently buildings upon Jalan Sultan will not be demolished to have approach for a Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) project, though stopped short of guaranteeing which prime land in a capital will stay in a hands of current landowners.

Deputy Minister in a Prime Minister's Department Datuk Ahmad Maslan told Parliament currently a supervision will protect a buildings in a ancestral Chinatown area even though they "are not gazetted as birthright sites."

But a Pontian MP refused to guarantee which land upon Jalan Sultan and Bukit Bintang will be returned to landowners after tunnelling for a multibillion megaproject is complete.

He pronounced plan owners "MRT Co is in negotiations with in isolation landowners" to come to a resolution where "they usually vacate a buildings during tunnelling and embrace remuneration so lapse of land does not arise."

Ahmad also denied accusations led by former MCA boss Datuk Seri Ong Tee Keat which MRT Co officials gave "not a single chance" to Jalan Sultan traders to benefaction their pick routes, which would see their properties saved.

He pronounced which a alignment proposed by landowners did not allow for integration with a existing Pasar Seni LRT station, and which curves upon a referred to track were too sharp.

"There was no alternative," he said.

MORE TO COME

The Malaysian Insider :: Malaysia
Courtesy of Bonology.com Politically Incorrect Buzz & Buzz

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