Property groups team up to battle for buyers’ rights

THE CYPRUS Land and Property Owners’ Association (KSIA) and the Cyprus Property Action Group (CPAG) have teamed up to explore ways of fighitng for the rights of property buyers in Cyprus.

KSIA is affiliated to the Cyprus Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KEVE) and is a long-standing member of the International Union of Property Owners.

CPAG was only established in May last year, but has already attracted thousands of dissatisfied foreign buyers.

Teaming up with KSIA, which has strong contacts with the government, parliament, local authorities and various other bodies in the property field, will help foreign buyers better push for their rights, CPAG said in a statement yesterday.

The two groups said they plan to make 2008 “a year of intense lobbying” on property issues.

The statement said the two groups met in Peyia recently and toured the area “to view the shocking illegal and other unsuitable developments taking place in the area, even in places like ravines and drainage courses”, CPAG said.

George Strovolides, President of KSIA, said that the two groups had an interest in resolving the common problems faced by their members.

He said one of the biggest problems faced by property buyers of all nationalities in Cyprus was the isuse of title deeds.

Foreign buyers can wait years or even in cases decades to receive their title deeds from peopery developers.

“In Cyprus, buyers can pay in full and then not own their homes, sometimes for many years, as developers raise mortgages using land on which these very homes stand,” said Strovolides.

“Given the risk in this situation, especially in the current economic climate, something needs to be done to turn this current situation around.”
Denis O’Hare of CPAG added: “We don’t mind developers taking their own business risks, this is how the world works. However, we do strongly object when they are taking risks with our homes, especially as we have already paid for them in full. We think this situation is scandalous and needs addressing by the government right now.”

Meanwhile, in the UK, British property buyer Conor O’Dwyer, whose developers were arrested and charged with allegedly beating him up in January this year, will this weekend continue his picketing of UK property trade fairs to highlight his case and those of other Britons facing problems in Cyprus. O’Dwyer spent a week in Larnaca hospital.

This weekend, he and his wide will publicise their situation by handing out leaflets outside the property show “A Place in the Sun Live” at the ExCel centre in London’s Docklands. It is the second time the couple has picketed a property fair in the UK in as many months.

O’Dwyer, whose case is fully detailed on the website lyingbuilder.com, is also planning a demonstration outside the Cyprus High Commission in London in June.

“Problems suffered by victims range from the non issuing of title deeds, structural faults, illegal building and developers extorting immovable property tax and transfer fees.  Many victims are resident in Cyprus but will be represented by their offspring who may inherit the problems drawn up by unscrupulous lawyers,” said O’ Dwyer.
“In my particular horror, the Minister of Interior told the media ‘an Investigating Officer has already been appointed’. That was in August 2007!  Since then I’ve been brutally beaten for just looking at my house from the roadside in Frenaros.  Every month, my lawyer Yiannos Georgiades chases the authorities for a criminal investigation into the reselling of my house and every month it’s the same.  It’s stuck at the local level.”

By Jean Christou Published on April 26, 2008

Property victim to stage UK protest

BRITISH home buyer Conor O’Dwyer will begin a three-day protest outside one Britain’s biggest property fairs in a move that could seriously damage the lucrative industry in Cyprus.

O’Dwyer, 38, told the Cyprus Mail yesterday that he and his wife would protest outside The Homebuyer & Property Investor Show at ExCeL London, which begins today and runs until Sunday. They will distribute leaflets warning people of the pitfalls of buying a home in Cyprus, he said.

The fair usually attracts around 15,000 prospective home buyers and numerous Cypriot developers will be represented among the 250 stands.

“I said if my recent trip to Cyprus didn’t bear any fruit that I planned to stage a protest,” O’Dwyer said. “There will be many estate agents there and all of the property magazines”.

protest leaflet
protest leaflet

In his leaflet O’Dwyer says Cyprus is a beautiful country with lovely people but is being spoilt by greedy developers and unscrupulous lawyers. He outlines the basics of the ongoing case he has with a Cypriot development company, which are detailed in full on his website lyingbuilder.com and on YouTube.

The British ex-soldier spent a week in Larnaca hospital in January after he was beaten up in Frenaros when he went to take pictures of the house he had bought and over which later came into dispute with the developers.

He says they unilaterally cancelled his contract and kept his money, some £75,000 sterling because he had pulled them up over what he saw as a violation of the terms of the contract. The case is pending at court. The developers have accused O’Dwyer of allegedly masterminding a plan to extort a newer, more expensive property, and exorbitant damages from the company.

They have, however, been charged by police in connection with the attack on O’Dwyer in Frenaros, but the case has yet to reach the courts. “My case has been treated disgustingly by the CID in Paralimni,” O’Dwyer said yesterday. “They charged them with the lesser crime of actual bodily harm when it was clearly grievous bodily harm because I spent six days in hospital.”

O’Dwyer said he has been left with little choice now other than protesting in the UK as he has managed to get nowhere towards solving his case in Cyprus over the past three years.

He and dozens of other buyers, stung by developers in Cyprus, are also planning a later demonstration outside the Cypriot High Commission in London, possibly during a visit there by new President Demetris Christofias who has been invited to London by Downing Street.

In a written statement issued later yesterday, O’Dwyer said he had been “saddened by the outrageous lack of action taken by the Cypriot authorities” in both the assault case and the property dispute.

“Throughout the case, the authorities have reacted indifferently and unsympathetically,” he said.

“This protest outside The Homebuyer & Property Investor Show in London will be the first of many.”

By Jean Christou
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