Only 15 foreigners and Viet Kieu
(overseas Vietnamese) were granted certificates of house ownership in Ho Chi
Minh City as of May 15, according to statistics from the municipal Department
of Construction.
The reality is
in stark contrast with a government decree and new housing laws enacted in
2015, which relaxed requirements for
foreigners to own properties in Vietnam.
Tran Vinh Tuyen,
deputy chairman of Ho Chi Minh City, recently issued a dispatch to the city’s
departments, police and military command demanding that the bodies work toward
further facilitating the issuance of house ownership certificates to foreign
individuals and organizations.
The dispatch
rapped the relevant bodies for their inertia in implementing a previous
directive from the municipal administration, in which it requested the urgent
determination of zones off-limits to foreigners due to national defense and
security reasons.
The lack of
clear guidelines on the restricted areas had slowed the processing of house
ownership applications by foreigners in the city, the dispatch noted.
"The
Department of Construction must take responsibility for this delay as the body
is in charge of coordinating the determination of national defense and security
zones,” the deputy chairman said.
"In most
cases, foreigners who apply for house ownership are looking for long-term
settlement rather than making a profit from re-selling their property,” said
Hoang Manh Thang, head of a notary office in Ho Chi Minh City. "However,
they often change their minds upon learning that they would have to wait for a
conclusion on which areas were off-limits to foreigners.”
According to
statistics provided by the municipal Department of Construction, only 15
foreigners and Vietnamese living abroad were granted certificates of house
ownership in Ho Chi Minh City as of May 15.
Deputy chairman
Tuyen has urged relevant authorities to speed up their determination of
restricted zones in the city as well as publish a complete list of realty
projects that foreigners are not allowed to own.
In 2015, a
government decree and new housing laws came into effect, granting foreign
organizations and individuals the right to own at most 30 percent of the
apartments in a condo building.
For individual
properties in an area with a population equivalent to that in a ward-level
administrative unit, foreigners are permitted to own a maximum of 250 houses
under 50-year leases.
After the
50-year period, foreign individuals can extend the ownership once, but not for
more than 50 years.
The old law
permitted them to own only one piece of property for a maximum time frame of 50
years.
Zones considered
sensitive to national defense and security are off-limits to foreign buyers.
(Source:
tuoitrenews)