Cyprus. Cyprus may maintain for five years from the date of its accession to the EU, its legislation as in force on 31 December 2000 regarding the acquisition of residences for secondary use. According to the Acquisition of Real Estate (Aliens) Cap 109 and the Amending Laws 52/69, 55/72 and 50/90, the acquisition of real estate in Cyprus by non-Cypriots is subject to the approval by the Council of Ministers. The Council of Ministers has authorised the District Officers to grant approval on its behalf. When the real estate concerned exceeds 2 donums (1 donum = 1 338 m2), approval may be granted only for the following purposes:
(a) primary or secondary residence not exceeding an area of 3 donums,
(b) professional or commercial premises,
(c) industry in sectors deemed beneficial for the Cypriot economy. The above law has been amended by the ‘Acquisition of Real Estate (Aliens) (Amendment) Law of 2003, No 54(I)/2003’. The new Law imposes no restrictions on EU nationals and EU registered companies for the acquisition of real estate linked to primary residence and foreign direct investment or the acquisition of real estate by EU real estate agents and land developers. Regarding the acquisition of residence for secondary use, the Law provides that for a period of five years, following Cyprus's accession to EU, EU nationals not permanently residing in Cyprus and EU registered companies not having their registered office, central administration or principal place of business in Cyprus, may not acquire real estate for the purpose of using it as secondary residence, without prior authorisation by the Council of Ministers, which has delegated its authority to the District Officers, as mentioned above.
Cyprus. Department of Civil Aviation of Cyprus, 00 Xxxxxxxx Xxxxxx, 0000 Xxxxxxx, Xxxxxx legally represented for the purpose of this Agreement by Xx Xxxxx Xxxxxxxxx, Schedules Facilitator, Cyprus Airports.
Cyprus. Agreement on Social Insurance between the Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the Government of the Republic of Cyprus, dated 6 October 1969.
Cyprus. Older adults, at the age of 65+ hold 13,9% of the population in Cyprus and 7,4% are living alone in their households as of 2014 statistics. The healthcare system in Cyprus consists of two delivery mechanisms: the public sector and the private sector. The centralized structure of the public sector is financed by the state budget and is responsible for the planning, organization, administration and regulation of the healthcare services. Healthcare is provided by the primary healthcare centres and the hospitals under the direct control of the Ministry of Health, in the form of primary health care, specialists’ services, paramedical services, emergency services, hospital care, pharmaceutical services, dental care, rehabilitation and home care. There are two types of private sector programs in Cyprus: Home Care Nursing provides a) short term care: includes individuals, which according to evaluation by home care nurses, will benefit from a two month nursing care service and b) long-term care: includes individuals that after being evaluated by a home care nurse are provided with nursing home care services that lasts more than two months12. 9 Marktstruktur und Mitarbeiterentwicklung im ambulanten Pflegemarkt – 2014 - xxxx://xxx.xxxxxxxxxxx.xxx/media/datenmarkt/uploads/fachartikel/mitarbeiterentwicklung-bei-ambulanten- pflegediensten.pdf 10 xxxx://xxx.xxx.xxxx.xx/themen/pflege/pflegekraefte/pflegefachkraeftemangel.html 11 Ökonomische Potenziale altersgerechter Assistenzsysteme – BMBF 2012 12 Xxxxx, X. xx al. (2015) Evaluation of Home Care Nursing for Elderly People in Cyprus, International Journal of Caring Sciences, Vol. 8, No. 2, pp. 376-384. Home care (not nursing care) is provided also by the Social Welfare Services in Cyprus aiming to support vulnerable groups of people such as the elderly, to enable them to live at home. Carers visit people at their own homes in order to provide personal hygiene, house- cleaning, washing of clothes, shopping etc., but compared to the community nursing staff are not educated or experts on the health/nursing care. Cyprus has joined other Southern Mediterranean countries in moving long-term care towards the ‘migrant-in-the-family’ model. Home care is largely provided either by informal, unpaid carers within the family or paid, live-in female migrant workers mostly from Asian countries. In Cyprus, like elsewhere in the Mediterranean, migrant care workers are more affordable than local workers, and they are plentiful. Standard con...
Cyprus. Xxxxxxxx Xxxxxxxx, Civil Protection, presented BeSafeNet, a tool for promoting risk culture amongst populations, taking into account natural, geological, hydro- meteorological and technological hazards. He introduced the new website design and announced the upcoming Olympiad competition (April 2019), aiming at officially launching the BeSafeNet website for improving knowledge when facing disasters. A discussion followed his presentation, stressing the inclusion of both primary and secondary schools in this competition. The participants further underlined the importance of seeking close co-operation with the respective ministries of Education. Xxxxx Xxxxxxxx, Director, European Centre on Geodynamical Risks of High Dams, being absent, Xxxx-Xxxxxxxx Xxxxx, Director of CERG, France, presented the projects on the early warning systems related to landslides and landslide deformation monitoring, as well as on low cost technology in that context. The results of these projects can also be adapted to other natural hazards, such as earthquakes. Armenia is also experienced in work with risky slopes. The ECNTRM in the Russian Federation also declared their interest to co-operate in that project with the aim to come up with a set of methodologies.
Cyprus. No progress has been achieved so far, but a proposal for starting negotiations is being prepared by the trade unions. There is a hope that these will start in the beginning of 2006; • Demand to have the EU agreement translated into Greek via the ETUC project.
Cyprus. In the report of Cyprus to the EU Commission (NPNZEB_CY, 2012) nearly zero-energy buildings in Cyprus are defined as follows: Primary Energy Use4 < 180kWh/m2/yr and At least 25% of the 180kWh/m2/yr of the Primary Energy must be covered by RES. For non-Residential Buildings (mainly offices): Primary Energy Use4< 210kWh/m2/yr and At least 25% of the 210kWh/m2/yr of the Primary Energy must be covered by RES. In addition, for each building category and climate zone are indicated specific technical characteristics such as maximum U-values for building components, solar thermal for water heating, air permeability, natural ventilation and solar protection for windows. 4 Primary energy use for heating, cooling, lighting and domestic hot water.
Cyprus. The Textiles Monitoring Body has received the following notifications from Cyprus pursuant to paragraph 2(b) of Article 3. The TMB has reviewed these notifications1 and, in accordance with paragraph 5 of Article 3, is circulating them to WTO Members for their information. 1See G/TMB/R/9. G/TMB/N/146 Page 2 Permanent Mission of the Republic of Cyprus Geneva WTO/130/95 Dear Mr. Chairman, Notifications pursuant to Articles 6.12 and 3.2(b) of the Agreement Textiles and Clothing On behalf of the Government of the Republic of Cyprus I have the honour to inform you that:
Cyprus short paper; poster; presentation c65 2010-11 The European Library Contacts Working Group, Sarajevo, Bosnia. presentation c25 2010-11 EU Member States' Expert Group on Digitisation and Digital Preservation, Luxembourg. presentation c40 2011-05 The European Library meeting on Content Strategy, The Hague, Netherlands. presentation c20 2011-10 Statistics on culture: from a theoretical framework to a production of data: an ambition to confirm?, Luxembourg. presentation c40 2012-02 The European Library, Content Strategy Workshop, The Hague, Netherlands. presentation c20 All presentations are available on the ENUMERATE website: xxxx://xxx.xxxxxxxxx.xx/en/about_enumerate/conferences_workshops All partners have links to the ENUMERATE website. For example: There have been two newsletters during the first period. ENUMERATE’s mission, objectives, stakeholders, and activities; Overviews of the partners in the project, with their experience, and logos; National coordinators – introduces their role; ENUMERATE / MSEG workshop – report on the most important meeting that took place in the first six months of the project. Announcement of the first Core Survey of the project, gives information on the survey, and calls for participation; List of national coordinators is now complete. The article lists them by country and gives contact details Information on the Advisory Group’s responsibilities, and short biographies on the current members. ENUMERATE Data Partner – Announcement that the project has hired a company to carry out the statistical analysis of the data collected from the surveys. Meet the team – ‘Xxxxxx XxXxxxx’ – The first of series of articles about the individuals who are participating in the project: what they do and their experience. Social Media – A short article advertising the social media channels that ENUMERATE uses. Invites users to get involved. Total newsletter usage: c600 downloads
Cyprus. For Cyprus no mandate has been given by the Member State.