Alexis wrote:
If necessary use an accountant (rather than Gwenny) to help claim your Cyprus pension as the accountant is already used to dealing with the Social Insurance office and so would have the contacts with the relevant knowledge.
My former accountant was next to useless in helping me secure my Cyprus State Pension. Cyprus pensions are handled at a specialist office in Nicosia, who avoid answering the phone 90% of the time. After several weeks of trying, my accountant achieved nothing and gave up.
Frustrated after 18 months of trying to secure my pension I visited said offices in Nicosia. It was like going back to Dickensian times, with beige folders stacked floor to ceiling in each office. Lady I saw listened politely and offered to see what she could do. But actually did nothing. I wrote letter after letter to Nicosia with increasing severity, but got nowhere.
At this time I became aware of a fixer in Paphos (not Gwenny-Mary in this instance, though we have used G-M for many services) called Charis. Went to see Charis and had a meeting with him and agreed a fee for his services. Long story short, after Charis got on the case, within a week I received a letter from the Pensions office telling me that my pension would start with immediate effect and also advising that within a week or two I would receive 2 years backdated pension into my bank account. Which I did. Whoopee! Deep joy!
People are quick to knock 'fixers', but they are very capable individuals, know how things work in Cyprus and speak the lingo. They take the hassle out of getting things done (which I haven't the time, knowledge, expertise or patience for). Charis was also instrumental in halving the amount our leading Paphos developer wanted before handing over our Title Deeds - a €9,500 saving to us. Before I engaged Charis, a well-known Paphos lawyer charged us €500 and made a half-hearted attempt to negotiate with the developer. In other words, he wrote a very polite letter. He came back to tell us that the developer's €19,000 demand was quite reasonable... and that we should pay it if we wanted to secure our Deeds. Yeah, right. Of course, no lawyer ever wants to fall out with a leading developer, do they?