The BBC has recently published an article online about issues regarding property in Moscow; essentially describing the ownership of immovable property in Russia as “lawlessness”.
The article describes the case of a group of occupants of a block of flats in Moscow, who found that the house where they were living was being demolished to build new property, and as a result describes the situation as a consequence of corruption in a legal or administrative system that was favoring the powerful “mafiosi”, an idea that abounds in western media when it comes to talk about Russia.
In our opinion, the BBC writer does not take into account the complexity of the present situation.
Laws regarding private property are relatively new in our country. As a consequence, even Russian people unfortunately fail to understand them and to act accordingly in order to protect their rights.
The privatization that started in the early 90s opened a process that allowed the Russian people to register the ownership of immovable property, based on the concept of “previous usage”. The facts mentioned in this BBC article are not possible nowadays in Russia unless the occupants of a house have not appropriately registered their property or have failed to prove their rights, so the rights over the property are disputed.
Of course, it could be argued that the powerful would always be in a better position to defend their cases, but that happens not only in Russia, it happens in any country.