Protect reluctant parties in en bloc sales
MR TAN Keng Ann’s letter last Saturday (‘Review law on en bloc sales’)
revealed the unfair predicament suffered by a good number of people amid
the frenzy of many collective property sale exercises. Instead of leaving
them alone to retire in peace and contentment, young speculators callously
go out of their way to make home owners like Mr Tan miserable, all to make
a quick buck.
I am not involved in any collective sale, but from what I have heard from
friends who are, the situation is dire and shameful. Meetings of condo
owners to discuss such sales are invariably boisterous. Some turn ugly
with owners hurling verbal abuse at one another, with those who refuse to
sell on the receiving end. They are also harassed between meetings.
It is clear that those who put pressure on reluctant owners have much to
gain if the sale goes through. Some speculators have bought several units
earlier in anticipation of a successful sale. It is purely business and
their aim (and that of the would-be developers) is to make money. The
feelings of people like Mr Tan do not concern them in the least.
Yes, the law must change if we are serious about curbing speculation. It
would protect the interest of owners who cherish their homes. Why take
away the rights of owners who are not interested in the money and want to
stay put? Besides, many of the condos involved are not by any stretch of
the imagination obsolete in design, or in a state of disrepair.
Lee Seck Kay
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