'Black September' for Kg Buah Pala
By Athi Shankar
GEORGE TOWN: Come Malaysia Day on Sept 16,  former residents of Kampung Buah Pala will gather to mark a sombre  event, the first anniversary of the demolition of their village.
Dubbed 'Black September', the ceremony would be held at an open space near the former village site.
Kampung  Buah Pala Residents Association chairman M Sugumaran said Malaysia Day  was chosen in order to refresh the memory of Malaysians about the  demolition of the 200-year-old village.
“Thanks to the Pakatan  Rakyat state government and Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng, Penang Indians  lost their final Indian heritage village last September. We aim to  organise Black September as an annual event,” he said, adding that an  application would be filed for a police permit.
“We hope the police will be considerate and kind enough to give us a permit,” he told FMT.
Sugumaran said he expected at least 100 people to turn up for the ceremony, where a prayer session would also be held.
Kampung  Buah Pala was once known to locals, especially Indians, as the Tamil  High Chaparral due to its high population of Indian cowherds and  livestock as well as unique cultural features and festivities.
The  village was flattened to make way for a posh condominium project - the  Oasis - undertaken by landowner Penang Civil Servant Cooperative Society  and developer Nusmetro Venture (P) Sdn Bhd.
Originally, some 33  families lived in the village when the Oasis project was hatched by the  previous Barisan Nasional state administration some five years ago.
The 6.5 acres was sold to the cooperative for only RM3.21 million.
However,  the Gerakan-led state government inserted a clause to compel the  developers to settle the compensation issue with the villagers first  before the land title could be transferred.
Court case pending
Nine  families agreed to the original compensation package, which was either a  flat unit in the Oasis or cash, and vacated the village.
But 24  others stayed put to fight for the land, which they claimed was given to  their ancestors under trust by their colonial plantation master, the  Brown Family.
When the village was demolished, the Pakatan  government agreed to compensate the families with a double-storey house  each, to be built on a 1.5 acre plot of land at the project site.
However,  nine out of the 24 families did not get the house. The houses were  instead given to villagers who had already left after agreeing with the  original compensation package.
According to the official version,  the nine families failed to ink the documents for the houses in time.  However, Sugumaran and the rest pinned the blame on Chief Minister Lim  Guan Eng.
“The DAP-led state government wanted to exact revenge on us for standing up for our rights,” he claimed.
The  nine families have already initiated court action to seek an order to  have a full trial over the Kampung Buah Pala land status.
They  have argued that since the land was under a federal trust, the state  government had no right to transfer the land to a private developer.
Moreover,  there had been no documented evidence to show that the federal  government had ever transferred the land title to under the Penang  government, read the affidavit.
 
 
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