|
|
|
Why
the confusion? The boundaries of municipal lands in Comayagüela are easily seen in the 1900 city map, which is confirmed by the Certificate registered with the Registry of Property in 1911. (see footnote) According to this map, where the boundaries are marked in red, all the land within the boundaries is public land that belongs to the municipality. The registration of the public lands notes each of the points in the map made in 1900. The neighborhoods of Flor del Campo, La Rosa, La Rodas, San Buenaventura, Altos de la San Francisco, La Pradera, Villa los Laureles, Las Torres fall within these points. These eight neighborhoods are on land that the lawyer Oscar Siri Zúñiga claims to own in a legal dispute with the City of Tegucigalpa. The map include important landmarks like el Cerro El Mogote, El Cerro Estiquirín and la Poza Toncontín. It is also possible to see the Guacerique and Choluteca rivers marked in blue on the map. The rivers today serve as a reference for determining which land is within the public land boundaries. In 1980 the Department of Legal Land Registry arrived at the same conclusions in an investigation which served as the basis for the City's agreement to recover land, including #166 from 1981. *Oscar Siri Zúñiga's claim to own the land comprising the 8 communities listed in this article is based partly on the claim that this land does not lay within the boundaries of municipal lands. This map negates this claim. |
|
|
Index Title Search Reveals that the Zúñigas do not own the Land in Dispute Unregistered property in Honduras totals $12.900 billion The boundaries of city land in Comayagüela have been clear since 1900 Siri Zúñiga could get 100 million lempiras due to the negligence of the City A solution is proposed to the legal problems of tenancy in urban areas |