Bulgarian authorities have promised a formal investigation into
allegations by British real estate investors who claim they have been
conned out of their properties in the ski resort of Bansko.
The group of investors, who paid €6 million for their properties,
staged a protest outside the block of apartments in the Four Seasons
development after being denied access for two years. They have been
caught up in a dispute after estate agency Rockarch which sold them the
properties became the victim of a fraud.
The London based agency claims it has been defrauded by a Bulgarian
business partner who apparently transferred ownership of some of the
apartments to a Bulgarian company for a fraction of their real value.
Tsvetan Tsvetanov, Bulgaria's Interior Minister and Deputy Prime
Minister, said that the deputy director of the Chief Directorate of the
Criminal Police and the appellate prosecutor of Sofia, Vicho Vichev,
would go to Blagoevgrad to examine the records and go on to Bansko if
required.
Tsvetanov said that it is important to determine why, if the British
people had legitimately purchased property in the resort they had been
deprived of access for such a long time.
In the development of 107 apartments, a fitness centre, a spa and a
restaurant, the some 78 apartments were bought by British investors and
the rest were transferred in what they alleged was a 'shady financial
transaction' to Bulgarian company Zekom which has the keys to the
complex and has since refused access to the remaining owners.
The case highlights problems faced by overseas buyers in Bulgaria
where a number of disputes center around the purchase of property and
bribery and corruption still exists in the system. It is estimated that
some 4,000 British property buyers are currently involved in disputes
over property.
In Bansko around 2,300 apartments are owned by British people. Local
officials are supportive as the ski resort relies on foreign visitors.
The Foreign Office said that the British ambassador has met with
Bulgarian officials to express concern about the problems experienced by
some UK property owners.
A spokeswoman for the group of British owners, Sharon Hassall, said
the development was completed in the summer of 2008 but they have since
not been given the keys. Many of the owners bought the properties off
plan in 2006 after seeing them advertised at property shows |