The representative of users of Swiss franc loans, Dragan Senić, submitted to the chief special prosecutor Vladimir Novović an amendment to the criminal complaint, which requires him to review the case related to loans approved with a currency clause for Swiss francs, which were approved by Adiko Bank (formerly Hipo Alpe Adria Bank).
The criminal complaint refers to the lawyers and the former management of Hipo Alpe Adria Bank, the former and current head of the Central Bank (CBCG), judges of the High Court, and special state prosecutors.
Among the more than 20 persons included in the report are, among others, the current governor of the CBCG Radoje Žugić and vice-governor Nikola Fabris, MP of DPS Petar Ivanović, lawyer Vanja Mugoša, prosecutors Lidja Mitrović and Zorica Milanović.
"I am asking especially on behalf of the families of the tragically injured clients due to non-application of the Law on Conversion, due to fraud and robbery, broken families who were destroyed, that you make a decision on the review of the entire criminal case," Senić states in the application addressed to Novović.
He stated that the prosecution should obtain all payments to the lawyer's account from Hipo Alpe Adria bank, and investigate why certain approved loans in high amounts were written off as a whole at the expense of the bank, and in favor of individuals.
The Parliamentary Committee for Economy, Finance and Budget also requested that Novović reopen the case regarding the "Swiss" at a consultative hearing on this topic on April 10.
At that time, prosecutor Milanović said that in connection with the conclusion of the contract on loans in Swiss francs, several cases were formed that were merged into one, that she undertook numerous evidentiary actions and, through their analysis, determined that there was no reasonable suspicion that any of the reported persons had committed a criminal offense from the jurisdiction of the Special State Prosecutor's Office.
In 2016, the state allowed citizens who took out loans in Swiss francs from Adiko Bank to convert those loans into euros under the conditions that were valid on the day they were taken out, i.e. with a fixed interest rate of 8,2 percent per annum and without a grace period. interest.
This was done through a law adopted by the Parliament, which was preceded by a lawsuit filed by the clients. The lawsuit was filed in May 2013. The bank approved loans in Swiss francs in 2007 and 2008, and later, due to the change in the exchange rate, installments were drastically increased. Because of that situation, some citizens took their own lives. Since the law fulfilled what the citizens demanded by the lawsuit, 113 of them gave up the lawsuit due to the economy of the procedure, while 154 clients did not. However, to this day there remains the issue of unresolved court costs, which are being tried to fall on the citizens.
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Recently, the Parliamentary Committee for Economy requested that Novović reopen the case regarding the "Swiss".
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