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Purchasing your New Home in the Sun!!

 

Retired? Which way now?
Have you just retired or are about to? Where do you go from here?
You want to slow down and enjoy life, away from the rat race and the rain?
Then Cyprus is the place for you!
With approximately 320 days of sunshine a year, mild winters, English widely spoken and banks and laws based on English and European practices,
Cyprus is a wonderful mixture of the exotic and the familiar.
 

Considering buying a Holiday Home?
The world seems to be getting smaller, and flying to Cyprus now only takes
4 – 4.5 hours, less time than it takes to drive from London to Manchester (and no traffic jams!).
With almost guaranteed summer sunshine and warm springs and autumns,
Cyprus has a lot to offer the holiday maker. Don’t worry, you don’t even have to
miss those all important football matches; the locals love football (any football,
UK, European, Greek, World Cup etc…) and watch it on satellite TV in the bars.
 

Where do I start looking?
The first place to look is a Licensed Estate Agent, for re-sale or new property. There are many property developers in Cyprus (and especially Pafos), but very few Licensed Real Estate Agents, able to sell you value for money re-sale properties.
Independent legal advice is HIGHLY recommended, and any Estate Agent will be happy for you to find your own or refer a reliable lawyer to you.
 

The Nuts and Bolts of Property Purchase in Cyprus!
Once you have found a property to purchase, your next step is to hire a lawyer, open a bank account and put down a holding deposit. Most Estate Agents know that people on holiday/traveling abroad don’t carry with them a huge amount of money, so only a small holding deposit of approx. £500 - £1000 is needed.
From here on your lawyer (with your Power of Attorney) takes over the process.
 
How do I pay for my new Property?
Usually purchasers are given approximately 14 days after they return home to send out the remainder of the 10% deposit. The subsequent or final payments dates will have been agreed upon by yourselves and the vendors.
You would send the money to your bank account here in Cyprus (which you set up before you returned home!) and then, your lawyer, with your Power of Attorney, could withdraw the money to pay the vendors.
 

How do I make an appointment?
Making an appointment to view property couldn’t be simpler! A phone call, an e-mail message, a fax, a letter or even just calling into the office is all you need to do.
To contact us click here
Purchasing Property In Occupied Cyprus

 

Memo from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Republic of Cyprus


Illegal “sale” of Greek Cypriot property in the area of Cyprus under Turkish Military Occupation.

As a result of the illegal Turkish invasion and occupation of the northern part of Cyprus, approximately 200,000 Greek Cypriots, who lived in the area currently occupied by Turkey, were compelled by force to leave their properties and to move to the government controlled area. Their properties were then illegally expropriated by Turkey and its subordinate local administration and passed on mainly to Turkish mainland settlers who were brought in from Turkey as part of the illegal colonization policy of the occupied area of Cyprus by Ankara.

Since then, the U.N. Security Council has adopted a series of resolutions (especially 541 (1983) and 550 (1984)) recognizing the Government of the Republic of Cyprus as the only legal Authority in the entire territory of the Republic and calling “upon all states not to recognize the purported state of the “TRNC” set up by the secessionist acts… [and] not to facilitate or in any way assist the aforesaid secessionist entity”.

Furthermore, the case of the violation of the human rights of Greek Cypriots by Turkey, in general, and of their property rights, in particular, was brought before the European Court of Human Rights. In the four cases that the ECHR issued its ruling, namely the Loizidou v Turkey judgment (1996, 1998), the Cyprus v Turkey judgment (2001), the Michaelidou Developments Ltd and Tymvlos v Turkey judgment (2003) and the Demades v Turkey judgment (2003), the Court found Turkey in complete violation of the fundamental right to property of the Greek Cypriot legal owners.

The aforesaid judgments of the ECHR clearly set out the following points that need to be borne in mind:

1) The administrative practice applied by the subordinate to Turkey local administration in the occupied area of Cyprus of issuing “title deeds” to the new occupants of properties belonging to Greek Cypriots situated in the occupied area of Cyprus is based upon the so-called “legislative” and “constitutional” provisions of the said administration, which in no case whatsoever can be attributed any legal validity.
2) Greek Cypriot owners cannot be deemed to have lost their properties and have always remained and will continue to remain the ONLY true and lawful owners of their properties in the occupied area of Cyprus.

The only recent and belated compliance of Turkey with the 1998 ECHR judgment in the Loizidou v Turkey case undeniably proves that Turkey accepts the ruling of the Court, namely that Mrs. Loizidou, and all other dispossessed owners for that matter, are still “…the legal owner[s] of the land…” and that Turkey “actually exercises detailed control over the policies and actions of the authorities of the “TRNC”..[and] that her army exercises effective overall control over that part of the island”.

Further to the above, it must be stressed that the only legal authority in Cyprus is the Government of the Republic of Cyprus and no other organ can exist with the legality and the authority to execute any act in the realm of public life, including the transfer of property rights.

Moreover, it should also be borne in mind that purchasers, particularly those domiciled in the UK, who essentially “buy” property which does not belong to the “seller”, run the risk of being sued at the any time by the Greek Cypriot owners, many of whom are also domiciled in the UK, before the British Courts for trespass, or conspiracy to commit trespass, to such properties. Similar actions based on tort could very well be brought before the Courts of the Republic of Cyprus.

Finally, even the Annan Plan acknowledges the right of all dispossessed owners to their properties in the occupied area of Cyprus by virtue of the fact that it provides them with the right, as lawful owners of their properties to decide on either the reinstatement of their property or their full compensation.

Therefore, entering into a “deal” for the purchase of immovable property belonging to Greek Cypriots situated in the area of Cyprus under Turkish military occupation, constitutes an ILLEGAL ACT which could expose the “purchaser” to grave legal and financial consequences. In addition to that, purchasers have no legal title deed after the conclusion of such a “deal”, as no title can be legally obtained from the current “sellers” who are not the legal owners of the said property.

The present message sets out a TRUE LEGAL position in this matter, as up held by an independent and internationally recognized judicial body, namely the European Court of Human Rights. It does not contain any political argumentation, nor is it intended to convey political messages. It must, however, be borne in mind by persons who intend entering into such “deals” and by those who have already done so, that Greek Cypriot property owners have been the victims of flagrant violations of their inalienable right to enjoyment of their properties and that for every day that such violations continue the lawful owners of properties are determined to make use of every legal tool before national or international organs to protect their rights against any person or entity violating their rights

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