Developers said they will not accept a change to approved policies to build on land sanctioned by parliament in 2006. 

The Malta Developers Association referred to recent protests against the approval of building schemes in sites known as ‘rationalisation areas’. These areas were included in developable areas by means of a parliamentary decision approved in 2006.

"While the MDA recognises that the addition of some of these sites to developable areas was a controversial decision, the fact is that a decision taken by Parliament cannot in any manner be rendered null by the Planning Authority's technical committee. On the contrary, the Planning Authority is obliged to seek solutions after leaving people in limbo for so many years," it said in a statement.

Since these areas were approved, there were a substantial number of purchases of sites within them, all made in good faith, the MDA said.

MDA, therefore, said it cannot accept the attitude of "the few" that are ignoring these facts and expect the state to meddle with citizens’ rights by first declaring land as developable and, many years later, abruptly change the status of the same land. This after a lot of money and time was invested in the proposals submitted to the Planning Authority by means of a Planning Control (PC) application.

It said if there are any particular sites that the State today recognises as ones that should not have been included in the rationalisation areas, it is obliged to pay damages to the owners who bought the land.

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