Lawyers "defend rule of law," resume work
Lawyers "defend rule of law," resume work
BELGRADE -- Serbian lawyers returned to work on Monday, after four and a half months of strike, after their demands to change laws on notaries and taxes were met.
The strike started on September 17 with demands to change the law on notaries public and regulations related to flat-rate taxes and replace the justice minister. The lawyers in Belgrade went on strike a week earlier.
After months of failed attempts, the Ministry of Justice and the Serbian Bar Association came to an agreement near the end of 2014 based on which parliament last week adopted urgent amendments to the laws on notaries public, real estate trade, out-of-court procedure, family and inheritance.
The most important changes from the lawyers' and citizens' point of view, is that papers from the notaries public will no longer be mandatory for all contracts involving change of real estate ownership.
The notaries will only write real estate contracts for persons legally deemed incapable of business decisions and support agreements. Mortgage contracts and statements on collateral can also be drafted by notaries if the client wishes so.
As for the taxes, which caused the Belgrade lawyers to go on strike for 15 days last summer, the government changed the disputed law near the end of 2014.
According to the new regulations, the flat-rate tax for the lawyers will not be higher by more than 10 percent in 2014 when compared to 2013, which was what the lawyers wanted.
Around 100,000 trials were postponed during the strike, along with a large number of police interviews and other trial-related procedures.
A number of lawyers who did not follow the strike-related instructions about appearing...
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