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Malaysian Minister: No housing projects solely for foreigners

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KUALA LUMPUR Foreigners are welcome to buy and own properties in Malaysia but developers will no longer be allowed to build projects solely aimed at foreign buyers, Finance Minister Lim Guan Eng said yesterday.

"Let me be clear that our Prime Minister does not oppose foreigners buying properties in Malaysia, but when townships are built exclusively for foreigners, how does that benefit the country and Malaysians?

"This the government will not accept," Mr Lim said in his keynote address at the 2018 Annual Property Developers Conference, as quoted by the Malay Mail news website.

He did not mention any specific projects but Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad had recently railed against the Forest City development on four man-made islands in the Johor Strait, facing Tuas in Singapore.

The project, led by Chinese developer Country Garden Pacificview, had been heavily marketed to mainland Chinese buyers and other foreigners.

Dr Mahathir said early this month that foreigners can buy residential units at the US$100 billion (S$137 billion) Forest City, but they would not be issued visas to live there.

The Malaysian government is studying the feasibility of reducing foreign ownership in Forest City, Housing and Local Government Minister Zuraida Kamaruddin had said earlier.

Forest City would eventually house 700,000 people, and some 70 per cent of home buyers there so far are from China.

Country Garden said it had complied with all laws and regulations and had approvals to sell to foreign property buyers.

Mr Lim said yesterday that no country would accept the construction of housing projects aimed mainly at foreign buyers.

"Don't worry," he said. "We are not preventing foreigners from buying your projects. After all, the projects are open and available to everyone, Malaysians and foreigners.

"Foreigners buying property is not a problem. We welcome that because, after all, they are bringing money into Malaysia," the Free Malaysia Today news site quoted him as saying.

Mr Lim refuted claims that the government is hostile to foreign businesses, saying nothing could be further from the truth.

He said Malaysia welcomes foreign direct investments (FDI) as long as they bring tangible benefits to the people and do not overburden the nation.

"We want high quality FDI flowing into the country, creating high quality jobs for the people in line with our objective of creating high quality growth shared among Malaysians. We do not need mindless growth just for good GDP (gross domestic product) numbers, which has no relevance to the people and where the people do not reap any benefits," he added.

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