This Regulation, which is composed of 23 articles, lays down procedures and criteria for the lease of agricultural land and farms owned by the Republic of Slovenia and managed by the Farmland and Forest Fund of the Republic of Slovenia by natural and legal persons, and the content and duration of the lease. Land may be leased only to nationals of the Republic of Slovenia and domestic legal entities with the majority share of domestic capital. This Regulation is composed of the following Sections: Introduction (Sec. 1); Subject to lease (Sec. 2); Duration of lease (Sec. 3); Management of the leased land (Sec. 4); Procedures (Sec. 5); Transitional and final provisions (Sec. 6).
Implements: Act on the Farmland and Forest Fund of the Republic of Slovenia. (1993-02-23)
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The Slovene lands were part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire until the latter's dissolution at the end of World War I. In 1918, the Slovenes joined the Serbs and Croats in forming a new multinational state, which was named Yugoslavia in 1929. After World War II, Slovenia became a republic of the renewed Yugoslavia, which though communist, distanced itself from Moscow's rule. Dissatisfied with the exercise of power by the majority Serbs, the Slovenes succeeded in establishing their independence in 1991 after a short 10-day war.
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