Jat Airways Hotels

Jat Airways Hotels are a chain of hotels in Serbia. The hotel chain was once subsidiary of the national airline of Serbia - Jat Airways which rebranded to Air Serbia in 2013. It is still a partner of the airline and therefore still holds the name of the former airline.

Jat Airways Hotels
Јат Хотели
Slavija Hotels from outside
Location within Belgrade
General information
Town or cityBelgrade
CountrySerbia
Coordinates44°48′7.2″N 20°28′0.8″E

Locations

Belgrade

In Belgrade there are three Jat Airways Hotels. All are called Slavija hotels as they are located on the Slavija Square in the city centre. The Slavija hotel complex contains three buildings. The tallest one being a 3 star hotel, a second smaller 2 star hotel where groups of children on school excursions usually stay and "Hotel Slavija Lux" – a 5 star all glass hotel. All hotels except the 2 star hotel have both apartments and smaller rooms. Hotel Slavija Lux is popular with famous people staying in Belgrade.

In front of the hotels there is a stop for a special bus line directly to Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport.

All three hotels became controlled by the government until a suitable buyer was found in 2007.[1]

Slavija Lux

In 1988, the management of the Slavija hotel signed a contract with the Kin Stib company, owned by George Jablan. The management was obliged to obtain necessary permits for gambling ("live games"), but the legal gambling regulations changed so the hotel failed to do so. According to the management, in the next 7 annexes of the contract, they settled everything with Jablan and that final annex, from 1998, confirms there is no debt. By the 8th annex, from 2000, Branislav Šaranović, a collaborator of Jablan (who was assassinated in 1998) and owner of the "Fil Šar" company from Vienna, Austria, entered the gambling business in the hotel. The management claims that he didn't invest a dime and in 2005, after another change of regulations, hotel quit on the gambling completely. At that point, Šaranović sued the state because of that, but lost the case.[2][3]

Šaranović, a crime boss involved in drugs, thefts and executions, was assassinated in 2009.[4][5][6] His widow, Katarina Šaranović, initiated the arbitration at the Serbian Chamber of Commerce in 2011 but she didn't pay the fees, so the case was dismissed. Šaranović restated her claim in 2015, paid the late fees, and asked for $2 million with interest. Without any proceedings, just based on her statement, the Chamber ruled in her favor in 2016. The ruling can't be appealed at the Chamber, but can at the regular courts. The hotel appealed the Commerce Court in March 2017 asking for the annulment of the Chamber's decision.[2][3]

The debt collector (in Serbia called "public executor") announced an auction for the "Slavija Lux" building. The hotel complained asking for the delay of auction to July 2017, citing the ongoing case at the Commerce Court and additionally sued the members of the Arbitrary Commission of the Chamber. The collector set the auction for December 2017 and rejected the complaint on 3 January 2018, after 7 months and a warning from the Court of Appeals, and organized the auction prior to the court's ruling on the hotel's complaint. The auction was held on 16 January 2018, and the only bidder was the Serbian "meat king", Petar Matijević who purchased the hotel for €6.5 million. He paid the amount but had to accept the provision that the sale is not closed until the court issues its final ruling on the matter. The hotel sent another complaint and on 22 January 2018 the court voided the transaction because it wasn't legally established if there is really a debt to "Fil Šar", hence the hotel couldn't be sold. The final ruling is still being awaited.[2][3]

Kopaonik

The Jat Apartments Kopaonik Hotel was built in the 1980s and is among the largest hotels within the Kopaonik hotels complex in Kopaonik ski resort.

Vršac

The Jat Airways hotel in Vršac is located within the Jat Airways Flight Academy. The capacity of the hotel is 120 beds. The hotel is only 20 minutes walking distance from Vršac Airport and usually houses trainees at the flight academy.

References

  1. Prodaja pod budnim okom bivših vlasnika Archived 2011-07-25 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Marijana Avakumović, Anica Telesković (2 February 2018). "Matijević platio 6,5 miliona, a nije kupio „Slaviju luks"" [Matijević paid 6,5 miliona, but didn't buy "Slavija Lux"]. Politika (in Serbian). pp. 01 & 10.
  3. Beta (17 January 2018). "Matijević uslovno kupio hotel Slavija luks za 6,5 miliona €" [Matijević conditionally purchased the Savija Lux hotel for €6.5 million] (in Serbian). N1.
  4. V.B. Mikić (8 October 2009). "Rafali u kralja kocke" [Burst fire for the gambling king] (in Serbian). Večernje Novosti.
  5. Stevan Dojčinović, Jelena Vasić (11 February 2014). "Serbia: Crime figure linked to trade group". OCCRP.
  6. Mihailo Jovićević (15 March 2017). "Od kraljeva kocke do bankrota i krvne osvete: Sve o ubijenoj braći Šaranović, njihovih poslovima i saradnicima" [From gambling kings to bankruptcy: all about the assassinated brothers Šaranović, their businesses and collaborators] (in Serbian). Blic.
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