|
As property law implementation begins to speed
up, following the recent amendments, the agencies of the Property Law
Implementation Plan, the OHR, OSCE, UNHCR, CRPC and UNMIBH, note that
misunderstandings remain regarding the entitlements of occupants of claimed or
abandoned property.
Once a decision, whether for 15 days or for 90 days, has been issued and has
expired, the holder of the decision has no further right to remain in the
property. The decision may state that the occupant has the right to seek
Alternative Accommodation from the competent authorities. However, this
entitlement, while obliging the local authorities to take immediate action to
provide such accommodation, gives the occupant no further legal basis to
continue to occupy the property.
The entitlement to Alternative Accommodation under the property laws can only
be met by those who fall below a certain income threshold, have no assets,
including allocated land, and have demonstrably made, by the date of 28
February, every effort in their power to gain repossession of their pre-war
property. This includes making efforts to reconstruct this property, if
uninhabitable. Temporary occupants who have at any point rejected any offer of
Alternative Accommodation, either from the local authorities or from the
claimant, or any offer of housing construction assistance, have no right to
Alternative Accommodation. Nor do those whose parents, children, spouse, or
family household members of any date since 1991 have regained access to pre-war
accommodation, or who have found accommodation anywhere in the same Entity of
displacement, or the pre-war city or municipality. Temporary occupants who were
subtenants before the conflict also have no right to Alternative
Accommodation.
The burden is upon the temporary occupant to provide documentary evidence
that he or she meets these criteria fully. If you meet these criteria, it is the
primary responsibility of the housing office or OMI of the municipality in which
you are currently residing to provide you with Alternative Accommodation.
If you have no right to Alternative Accommodation under the property laws,
you may still have the right to emergency accommodation if you and your family
including household members since 1991 have no accommodation available,
insufficient income and assets, and are registered as displaced persons. If you
can demonstrate that you meet these criteria, the competent ministries
responsible for refugees and displaced persons and for social welfare cases (in
the Federation, these will primarily be the cantonal ministries) must provide
you with such accommodation.
The local authorities who write decisions, sign eviction orders, and enforce
evictions are fulfilling their obligations under the property laws. In the same
way, people who are occupying apartments or property claimed by others, or
unclaimed apartments that should be used as Alternative Accommodation for those
who are legally entitled, must also accept that they must now vacate this
property, in accordance with the law.
|