Is there Justice in Cyprus?
By Margaret Sheard
A little while ago I got into conversation via the internet with Gavin Jones regarding an article he had previously published
It seems there is still no end to the saga and Gavin has published another article in the Cyprus Mail, as follows:-
What price justice in Cyprus?
Readers of these columns may well remember a 1,700 word article published in the Cyprus Mail that I wrote earlier this year entitled ‘The Man versus The State’. It catalogued the trials and tribulations my wife and I endured at the hands of the Cypriot judiciary and the crude methods employed to spin out the court procedure over a number of years with the appointment of four judges one after the other, numerous adjournments and other such wheezes.
The case resulted in the state agreeing to pay us derisory damages and a portion of the legal fees that we incurred over the six year period that this saga had spanned. It’s now approaching six months since the end of the case and no monies have been forthcoming, with us having to employ the services of our lawyers to obtain restitution.
The state has now ring-fenced itself whereby aggrieved individuals are no longer allowed by law to sequestrate the cars of ministers and other public servants and other assets. It would appear that the state can continue to string this process out ad infinitum. What price justice in Cyprus? It’s patently obvious that in Cyprus, there isn’t.
Gavin Jones, Paphos
To read the cyprusscene article and Gavin’s previously published article click here
This case from Gavin Jones all took place in South Cyprus and not having had any occasion to use the judiciary system in the North, I cannot make a personal comment, although I have heard of the experiences of some people who have had to resort to court cases in the North and it would seem there is a lot to be desired in the way matters are dealt with in the North as well.
So, is there justice in Cyprus?

