Residents in the
dark
The Star 3/6/2003
RESIDENTS of Villaria Condominium in Taman Bukit Mulia,
Hulu Klang, Selangor, are not sleeping easy these days.
You wouldn't too, if the hills backing your eight-storey
apartment blocks, once clad in lush greenery, are
reduced to sheer walls of exposed earth.
Ever since trees on frosted slopes were bulldozed
from the end of March, residents of the condominium and
the surrounding link houses have been anxious. And has
the clearing crept higher up the hills, the residents
became more nervous.
"A heavy downpour may just trigger a landslide, and
there is nothing to protect the buildings from the
torrant of mud," says apartment owner Michael Chow.
"This area is very wet, with a lot of runoffs coming
down the hills. Each time it rains, the stream outside
Villaria will roar with water. Now that hills have been
cleared of trees, where is all the water going to go?"
These fears are not unfounded. After all, Taman Bukit
Mulia is one of the many residential enclaves within
Bukit Antarabangsa, in area notorious for unstable
slopes and landslides because of the fragile geological
makeup.
And yet, a huge tract of fragile hilly land is now
being carved up. A signboard at the site have only the
barest information. It states that the tree-phased
30.4ha project is owned by the Ampang Jaya Municipal
Council but developed by Triumph City Development.
Phase I will have 660 units of low-cost flats for
evicted squatters in the municipality to be housed in
two blocks, 17 and 18-storey high respectively.
An official from Triumph City Development reveals
that Phase I, which over 11.3ha, will also include three
blocks of medium-cost apartments. He says the next two
phases are still under planning but way feature
higher-end apartments and semi-detached houses.
Taman Bukit Mulia dwellers questioned why the
development is going on when the state government had
stated that it would not allow development on highlands,
particularly in landslide-prone areas such as Bukit
Antarabangsa. This quiet residential area in Hulu Klang
is just next to the Highland Towers and Taman Hillview
where a landslide flattened the bungalow of former Armed
Forces chief Jen Tan Sri Ismail Omar last Nov 20,
killing eight.
They are also incensed that they were not told about
the project although they would bear the brunt of any
impact. Neither were their views sought. They learnt
about the project only when the clearing became visible
in early April.
Several residents say their complaints about the
hill-cutting lodged with the Ampang Jaya Council drew
the same response "We're still investigating" when, in
reality, the project belongs to the local authority.
Taking action
Last week, irate Taman Bukit Mulia residents formed a
group and submitted a letter of protest to the council.
There are seeking a meeting with council officials, and
have asked for earthworks to be stopped until their
concerns are addressed.
They also sought clarification on whether an
Environmental Impact Assessment has been done and if any
precautions have been taken by the developer to prevent
any landslips or mudflows.
"Our main concern is safety," says Villaria resident
Mohd Nordin Abbas.
"Anything can happen as the hills are above us. We're
the receiving and if water flows down.
"They must tell us what measures will be taken to
ensure safety. Will they build retaining walls? What
sort of drainage system will be installed? Now, we're
the dark and we don't feel safe."
The residents argued that the project did not adhere
to proper procedures. For instance, no "objection"
notice were put up although this was required for
development projects.
Trees, carelessly pushed down slopes, have damaged
the Villaria perimeter fence, creating a security
problems. The land clearing has also damaged concrete
drainage channels built on slopes surrounding the
apartment.
A drainage channel along the perimeter of the
apartment was also broken to receive discharges from a
slit pond. Eroded earth has stained the stream red.
As this stream feeds Sungai Klang, the state's major
artery will be silted up too, if no precaution is taken.
Safety is just one of the resident's many concerns.
They are also upset over the forest destruction.
"The sight of bulldozers inching up the hill slopes
saddens me and I fell so helpless. There goes my forest
view and cool mountain breeze," laments one resident.
The hill cutting revealed the sore truth to the
residents who had always thought that their properties
flanked the Gombak forest Reserve.
The Selangor Forestry Department, when asked to
investigate the forest clearing, divulged that a portion
of the reserve had been converted for development by the
state government in the early 1990s.
This begs a question: don't the residents have a
right to know when the surrounding forest reserve –
which was what attracted them to buy property there in
the first place and for which they paid a premium
price-loses its protected status?
The forest there was last logged in the 1950s and had
regenerated over time. Huge trees which soar to over 30m
cloak the slopes but now, only their stumps are left.
Sensitive slopes
The residents expect more problems to come. The hilly
terrain will have to be leveled to create enough flat
land to build on. One can easily imagine the amount of
earth-works needed. And the ensuing dust pollution.
"It is just no logical to have high- density projects
on such hilly terrain," Chow, the Villaria resident,
points out.
Residents wonder if the development had violated
guidelines on hillside development set by the Cabinet
Committee on Highlands. These stipulated that
development on slopes with gradients of between 26 and
35 degrees (class II) requires technical assessment and
EIA. Slopes with gradients over 35 degrees, which come
under Class IV, must not be developed.
Chow says the project should not have started,
pending the outcome of the study on safety of hill
slopes from the Klang Gates to Bukit Sungai Seputeh.
Residents also questioned council president Ahmad
Kabit's comment to reporters early last month that the
projects did not fall under the state government's
restriction on hill-slope development.
"Why should that be so?" asked Iris Teoh, who owns a
link house in the area.
"Just because it is a squatter resettlement project
does not follow environmental rules.
"Furthermore, only Phase I is for squatter
resettlement. The future phase are normal residential
development."
The new project is all the more worrying because it sits
on the same mountain range as the abandoned Bukit
Perdana project. In the early 1990s, a huge chunk of the
Gombak Reserve was de-gazetted to make way for this
exclusive bungalow lot project.
When trees were axed and the whole hill was cut up,
severe erosion and landslips marred the site. The
Department of Environment stopped earthworks and called
for an EIA, which found the area to have high erosion
risk. The project was never revived. Now, some 10 years
later, another portion of the same mountain range is
being developed.
An engineer with Triumph City Development says before
"cut and fill" work can start in two or three week's
time, it has to adhere to all procedures set by the
council pertaining to silts traps and controlling water
flows.
"Rest assured, the council will monitor (this). This
is a government project; we are just implementing it,"
he said.
He denied that the project failed to adhere to
restrictions on hill slopes and declined to elaborate on
the project.
These assurances, however, do little to allay public
fears over safety and concern over environmental
destruction.
Of course, many other hills are being flattened in
the Klang Valley but this one draws particular concern
because Bukit Antarabangsa has suffered from landslips
and fallen slopes. It has rows of dilapidated link
houses and apartments, left unfinished because they were
found unsafe.
For residents there, these sights are grim reminders
of the erosion risks there, hence their demand that the
area be left untouched and kept as natural as possible.
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