This measure will help land registries to solve more cases, and public notaries will immediately write down new data in digitalised certificates, all of which will reduce possibilities of abuse such as the sale of the same property to several buyers, the minister explained.
Presenting the ongoing reform in land registries, Skare-Ozbolt announced that as of September all data on flats should be put on the Internet and the data regarding registry offices of land books offices will also be available on web sites.
According to figures the minister today presented, backlogs in land registries throughout Croatia were cut by 107,200 since the start of the reform, and remaining 252,300 old cases are to be solved until the end of 2006.
As of 2007, land registries will be able to perform their duties without backlog cases when all land books are to be digitalised and covered by a single national data base.
The Zagreb land registry will be the first fully digitalised land registry as this job will be completed tomorrow (12 August).