Πέμπτη 2 Οκτωβρίου 2008

DORA BAKOYANNIS' MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS


On 31 October 2008 expires the deadline for the statement of real estates in the Cadastre (Ktimatologio) in Greece.
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I have been informed that exists big mobility for statement of real estates in the Cadastre (Ktimatologio) of residents of Thesprotia, former residents of Tsamouriá in Thesprotia, former Chams, today’s Chams residents, Chams of Australia, other curious, former beneficiaries of fortunes that have been put by the law under sequestration (“meseggyisi”) and have not been given to them the authorisation of management of because they are of “Greek origin”, Citizens of the ancient Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia former residents of Northern Greece, partisans “of Rainbow”, former residents of Macedonia and actually residing in Canada who are beneficiaries of real estates even in the centre of Athens.
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I asked a lawyer friend of mine “what a shit do these people want from the Cadastre (Ktimatologio)”. He answered: “They have lost everything and, what is more important, they have lost the legal deadlines to apply to the Court for the nullification of the sequestration existing in their estates. Now they make a statement in the Cadastre on their real estates that they claim. The cadastre officials will surely reject the statement as “unfounded”, and this “rejection” explicit or tacit - “enforceable acte” “acte executoire” “εκτελεστή διοικητική πράξη” - will be the only means to start a new deadline of 60 days (few people will loose it again, as in the past) - that for them will open the doors for applications of nullification and (after exhaustion internal legal resorts) for the European Court of Human Rights of Strasbourg”.
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I laughed. “How funny you are, sometimes” him I said.
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Chameria (Albanian: Çamëria, Greek Τσαμουριά Tsamouriá) is the name used by Albanians for part of the coastal region of Epirus in southern Albania and northwestern Greece. Most of what is called Çamëria is divided between the Greek prefecture of Thesprotia and the southern part of Albania's Sarandë District. The name is of uncertain etymology, but may derive from the ancient Greek name of the Thyamis river, or from the ancient Thraco-Illyrian tribe of Sameis.[1] Chameria traditionally was limited to the river's valley.

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