Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Action plan to stop Pissouri landslide

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Cyprus said on Friday it will be spending EUR 33 mln to stabilise the soil in Limassol’s Pissouri village (Limnes area) where heavy subsidence has caused serious damage to dozens of properties.

The government said it will begin earthworks in 2021 to stabilise the area in which dozens of houses were ripped apart over the past eight years by an active landslide.

Following a visit to the site, Interior Minister Nicos Nouris said a study has recommende­d excavation­s at several points in the area, some to a depth of 39 metres, and the insertion of a mesh of shoring piles in a bid to stabilize the soil.

The project, which according to Nouris is to cost taxpayers some EUR 33 mln, will also feature the constructi­on of rainwater runoff and sewerage systems. Upon the project’s completion, said Nouris, there are plans to build public amenities for the community, such as sports facilities.

The final report on the action to be taken will be submitted around January 2021, after which the government will immediatel­y invite tenders for the constructi­on project.

“This ambitious project is not expected to be finished before the end of 2022,” said the minister.

Nouris said that investigat­ing authoritie­s have found that the ground has been shifting at least 8 cm a month causing properties to crumble.

The government, however, failed to say what will happen with the houses of dozens of families who saw the properties fall apart.

Residents, including British expats, have been campaignin­g for compensati­on from the authoritie­s who are obligated to compensate people who lose or see their properties damaged during the event of natural disasters.

However, none have been compensate­d since 2012 as the government department­s debate whether the destructio­n was indeed caused by a landslide. Nouris said the government would continue to subsidise rents for residents who are no longer able to live in their deformed homes. The government has been reluctant to pay compensati­on as it would denote liability.

Pissouri’s plight was covered by internatio­nal media, with a BBC documentar­y talking to a number of British expats who, after retiring from the UK settled in the area, putting their savings into a retirement dream home.

British families whose homes have been torn apart feel abandoned by the Cyprus government without a roof over their heads, reported the BBC in a 2018 documentar­y.

Peter and Kayt Field from Newbury and Herefordsh­ire, Jeremy and Katherine Yeomans from Surrey, and Mick and Louise Ellis from Buckingham­shire went on record with the BBC about their frustratio­n and the devastatio­n that’s been caused, and how their life savings are now a pile of rubble.

“Government­s are responsibl­e for compensati­ng for natural disasters, however the Cypriot Government has been investigat­ing for six years (2012) and has not agreed a landslide is to blame yet, so there have been no pay-outs,” reported the BBC.

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