Job Recruitment Website - Immigration policy - After the immigrants move, will the original fields and houses at home still belong to us?

After the immigrants move, will the original fields and houses at home still belong to us?

After the immigrants moved, the original fields and houses at home no longer belonged to the aborigines.

1. The relocation of immigrants is generally based on the documents of the people's government at the next higher level that has the right to decide the relocation. After the house of the demolished person is evaluated and compensated according to law, the immigrants shall leave the original houses and land in rural areas within a time limit.

As for the house and its belongings, which can be taken away, it should be clearly agreed in the demolition contract. Under normal circumstances, houses have been compensated at a discount, indicating that the ownership of houses is no longer the personal property of immigrants.

According to the law, rural land belongs to collective ownership, and the indigenous people of the land have the right to use it. After the relocation, the immigrants were compensated and their right to use was recovered, so the land after the relocation was not owned by the immigrants.