Why don't these expats just take citizenship in their adopted countries ?
Then at least we wouldn't have to listen to their constant whining.
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Reply to: Portugal land grab
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Previously on "Portugal land grab"
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Originally posted by BrilloPad View PostPortugal 'land grab' laws: meet the families who could lose homes - Telegraph
British families could lose their homes due to draconian laws passing through parliament in Portugal
Who would be stupid enough to buy a house in Portugal?
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Originally posted by vetran View PostThe Telegraph don't seem to think so:
Were I the EU I would be reining this in and explaining to the relevant countries how damaging this is to the perception of the EU as a good place to live or do business. Not advising people to get a lawyer.
Mind you stick in 'spanish property repossession' into Google and look at the amount of websites selling repossessed properties. These can't all be from ones from 'Ley Reguladora de la Actividad Urbanística.' Also in Spain, town planning laws are devolved to the autonomous regions, which explains why there is a problem in some regions, and not in others. A lot of this happened due to corrupt local politicians working with property developers and there have already been some court cases against these people. Just for clarification, the EU has no jurisdiction over national planning laws, so is powerless to intervene on this front (for new development that is.)
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Originally posted by Mich the Tester View PostI´m trying hard to panic because I bought a house in another EU country, namely the Netherlands.
I´m not succeeding though.
Nowehere in Holland is further than about two feet from water is it?
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Originally posted by vetran View PostWere I the EU I would be reining this in and explaining to the relevant countries how damaging this is to the perception of the EU as a good place to live or do business. Not advising people to get a lawyer.
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Originally posted by vetran View PostWere I the EU I would be reining this in and explaining to the relevant countries how damaging this is to the perception of the EU as a good place to live or do business. Not advising people to get a lawyer.
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Originally posted by darmstadt View PostI was under the impression that much of the property that has been repossessed in Spain was either due to people not being able to pay their mortgages (they thought they could rent out as holiday homes but didn't work out) or unscrupulous developers sold the property or land event though there was no permit to actually build there which is actually a bit different...
The Telegraph don't seem to think so:
The situation in Portugal is being compared with Spain's notorious "land grab" law, under which hundreds of expatriate Britons lost homes on the Costa Blanca in the early 2000s.
Under a loophole in the law, known as the Ley Reguladora de la Actividad Urbanística (LRAU) and originally intended to speed up development on the Costa Blanca, developers could compulsorily purchase prime rural land by saying it was for urban development.
Developers made more than 20,000 compulsory purchases at fractions of the market value and many homes were demolished. In 2004 the European Parliament condemned the law and criticised apparent corruption among developers, officials and lawyers, but its call for a halt to the practice was ignored. In 2005 the European Commission stepped in and ordered Spain to resolve the situation.
Were I the EU I would be reining this in and explaining to the relevant countries how damaging this is to the perception of the EU as a good place to live or do business. Not advising people to get a lawyer.
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Originally posted by Mich the Tester View PostMight be time to phone a barrister who's completed his/her training and has read article 17 of the EU's charter of Fundamental Rights.
Also it seems it doesn't need to be a barrister it just needs to be someone with a clue....
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Originally posted by vetran View PostSpain did the same, we either have a EU where people who invest in property can enjoy that or we have free for all where member states do immoral things and expect their victims to have to protect themselves with expensive laws.
Sorry this sort of behaviour makes me doubt the validity of the EU.
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Originally posted by vetran View PostProperty rights are fairly fundamental, if the EU can't manage that then its not much use.
What's being done to those people appears to be very unjust indeed and utterly wrong, but perhaps the EU law is actually their only protection against what the Portuguese government is doing. Or perhaps the European Convention on Human Rights (which is not an EU thingummy).
They could take the EU Charter route, or outside the EU, the European Convention on Human Rights, European Convention on Human Rights - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia depending on what the fully qualified lawyer says gives them the best chance, instead of simply believing a ´trainee barrister´.
I don't know what the Portuguese constitution has to say about this, so I don't know if that's an option for them.Last edited by Mich the Tester; 13 May 2014, 14:36.
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Originally posted by Mich the Tester View PostBut on the one hand Eurosceptics complain that countries are being forced to comply with EU law, and on the other hand you want property rights enforced across the whole EU and you don't think that's happening. Which is it to be?
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Originally posted by vetran View PostSpain did the same, we either have a EU where people who invest in property can enjoy that or we have free for all where member states do immoral things and expect their victims to have to protect themselves with expensive laws.
Sorry this sort of behaviour makes me doubt the validity of the EU.
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