Goan properties: UK citizens petition Brown

23 Jun 2009, 0324 hrs IST, AGENCIES

LONDON: Several British citizens who bought property in Goa have
petitioned prime minister Gordon Brown to request the Indian
government to
resolve the impasse in which properties purchased by foreign nationals
were not being registered.

Over 125 people have signed the petition on the 10, Downing Street
website. The petition, led by Andrew F Davies, has been initiated
amidst reports of British citizens facing several problems in
purchasing and registering properties in Goa.

The petition said, "We petition the prime minister to approach the
government of India and request them to take cognizance of and correct
the unlawful actions of the state government of Goa whereby the
sub-registrars of Goa have been instructed not to order the
registration of deeds relating to the sale of immovable property where
one of the parties to the transaction is a foreign national."

"This is in direct contravention of the 1908 Registration Act. We
would also ask that the Indian government be asked to ensure that the
department of revenue, Directorate of Enforcement acts judiciously
when investigating alleged infringements of FEMA and is not being used
to harass foreign nationals who have bought property in Goa."

The petitioners noted that until August 2006, the sub-registrars were
accepting foreigners' deeds, and added that nearly 400 British
citizens who had bought property before August 2006 are now being
investigated by the Directorate of Enforcement with the threat of
confiscation.

The petition added, "Around 50,000 persons of Goan birth or descent
now live in the UK. The petitioners hope that they are happy here and
are treated fairly and justly, and ask only that the government of Goa
should extend the same courtesies to the few hundreds of foreign
nationals who are full or part time residents of Goa."

"The rule of law is central to the operation of democracy, and a
central pillar of law is the protection of persons and property. In
India any transfer of property, by any means and for any purpose, is
required to be registered. Thus to deny registration is to undermine
the very basis of the rule of law and of democracy."


http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Goa/Goan-properties-UK-citizens-petition-Brown/articleshow/4689436.cms

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