SINGAPORE – About 80,000 graves and six farms occupying more than 106 hectares of land – about a quarter the size of Clementi town – will make way for the expansion of a military airbase in the north-western part of Singapore.
The expansion of the 78-year-old Tengah Air Base is to accommodate the relocation of Paya Lebar Air Base (PLAB), which will be completed from 2030 onwards. Part of PLAB will also move to Changi Air Base.
In 2013, Defence Minister Ng Eng Hen said in Parliament that the expansion of both bases in Changi and Tengah will be necessary to house relocated fighter and support squadrons as well as accommodate facilities now in PLAB.
To prepare for the expansion in Tengah, the Government is acquiring four private land plots, exhuming 80,500 graves and realigning a major road.
Choa Chu Kang Cemetery, the only active burial ground and the biggest cemetery here, will lose a third of its 318ha land – or 100ha – in the largest exhumation there to date.
Some 45,500 Chinese graves and 35,000 Muslim graves will be exhumed in phases.
Graves older than 17 years will be exhumed first. They include 45,000 Chinese graves and 5,000 Muslim graves. They will be exhumed from the last quarter of 2019 and 2018 respectively.
Newer graves, with the most recent burial taking place three years ago, will have their exhumation date announced later. They include another 30,000 Muslim graves and 500 Chinese graves.
The Government will bear the costs of exhumation, as well as cremation for Chinese graves and reinterment for Muslim ones. Claimants will bear additional costs for performing other rituals or placing the remains in private cemeteries.
Separately, six farms are also affected. Four plots of private land – affecting three fish farms and a nursery – will be acquired in 2019, and will be compensated based on market value on the date on acquisition. Their 20-year leases would have otherwise ended between 2027 and 2030.
Two other farms will not have their leases renewed. Orchid farm Williton Orchids’ lease expires in 2019. Another affected farm, Chew’s Agriculture, had sold its remaining lease to the Government in May last year to purchase a new site.
The total affected farm land area adds up to about 6.3ha.
The affected farms were notified on Tuesday morning (July 18). The farms can continue operations at their current sites until January 2019.
A third change will see the existing Lim Chu Kang Road realigned, and the affected portion includes a 1.8km heritage road, characterised by its tall, mature trees with overarching tree canopies.
Agencies are studying the impact on the road and possible mitigation strategies, including transplanting the trees to a new road.
In a joint statement, the Ministry of National Development, National Environment Agency and Singapore Land Authority said the Government had “considered all alternatives” in developing this plan, and taken in account “our national defence and security needs, as well as the overall benefits of moving PLAB in the longer-term”.
“Government agencies have, as far as possible, tried to minimise the impact of these works, and affected stakeholders will be given advance notice to make alternative arrangements,” they said.
The relocation of Paya Lebar Air Base was first announced by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong in his National Day Rally in 2013.