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Hong Kong developer and 11 villagers jailed for deceiving government in rural housing scam

Judge imposes longest sentence, three years, on elderly developer who masterminded deception in which residents sold their land rights

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The villagers arrive at District Court, where they were given prison terms of up to two years and 10 months. Photo: Felix Wong

A developer and 11 indigenous villagers were jailed for up to three years on Friday for a scam in which they sold their land rights under the small house policy for profit.

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Judge Sham Siu-man said the government relied on villagers' integrity and honesty to operate the scheme, but this case showed the policy was "unfeasible".

Developer David Li Yam-pui, 82, approached indigenous villagers to buy their small house rights, then used their names to deceive the Lands Department and build houses on his own land.

"The indigenous villagers in this case have no intention to follow the government's policy to authorise their own rights. They only want to use their right to make money," Shum said.

He found this an unhealthy trend that should not be encouraged and so passed a deterrent sentence, jailing Li for three years.

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The two oldest villagers, Cheng Hing, 80, and Wan Kai-lun, 72, each received prison terms of two and a half years, while the rest were jailed for two years and 10 months.

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