They’re based in Limassol. I think that pretty much answers your question.
Good try FBI.
Haha. I’m new here. Are we talking foreign gangster families?
Many major gambling outlets (1xBet, parimatch, etc) are based in Limassol, same for Forex companies, that have been involved in numerous scandals mostly associated with shady practices and not returning investor money.
Real estate development in Cyprus is also shady where quality of construction leaves a lot to be desired and the actual title deed for your property may be years down the line depending on the developer being able to fully repay the bank loan for the land.
Last but not least, employment practices in Cyprus are some of the worst I’ve ever seen and HR is a joke, this goes for small and large enterprises.
I won’t even both mentioning local politics and civil services, like having to wait 3-6 months did your first unemployment benefits check to come in, and how you survive until then is your problem, or the failure to negotiate a livable minimum wage…
All of the above leaves a lot of room for somebody to be really pissed – go on tilt and decide to take action. With some radical and desperate slogan like “if they take away the future of our children, we’ll take theirs” or something…
So if you use this service and get into a fight in school, do these guys count as part of your klika?
People are making jokes. But I wanna ask is this business practice actually profitable? I mean Cyprus has 3000 taxi drivers and they are doing fine but the profession will start having problems in 20 years from now, as tourism is expected to drop, more people will join the profession and public transportation will become better.
Bus drivers are doing even better. They are over 1000 and most of them cooperate with state directly to transport either military or students.
Cyprus also has 155000 students in public schools/universities. Around 1/4th of them are foreigners.
In private schools/colleges/universities, I do not have numbers right now. But they must be around 30000, mainly foreigners in private universities.
So, how many people are actually going to use this? I doubt that in Cyprus this would be used more than 10000 times a year. And by that I mean, 15000 rides from house, to school and back. A school year with exams has around 150 days of actual school days. So I personally doubt there are more than 100 students whose parents would use this service in the whole island to sign annually for it. And they all would need to go to different school nationwide at the same time. So who would buy 100 cars to make this whole thing and how much would they need to charge to make a profit? I do not see it working.
I might have misunderstood the whole thing though.
b-but how will parents flex their range rover then
Be a Russian Oligarch
In Limassol we have way to many millionaire Russians owning either big villas or businesses.
This service is for them, not for Cypriots
What good is he gonna do stood on that side of the door?
The father is a well known mafioso in Cyprus
Viktor “the claw” Golubev. Source Wikipedia: “Viktor Nikolai Golubev (born february 31st 1974) is a business magnate, investor, and philanthropist…)
14 comments
LOL BASED
Souvlidji who puts too many fatty pieces.
They’re based in Limassol. I think that pretty much answers your question.
Good try FBI.
Haha. I’m new here. Are we talking foreign gangster families?
Many major gambling outlets (1xBet, parimatch, etc) are based in Limassol, same for Forex companies, that have been involved in numerous scandals mostly associated with shady practices and not returning investor money.
Real estate development in Cyprus is also shady where quality of construction leaves a lot to be desired and the actual title deed for your property may be years down the line depending on the developer being able to fully repay the bank loan for the land.
Last but not least, employment practices in Cyprus are some of the worst I’ve ever seen and HR is a joke, this goes for small and large enterprises.
I won’t even both mentioning local politics and civil services, like having to wait 3-6 months did your first unemployment benefits check to come in, and how you survive until then is your problem, or the failure to negotiate a livable minimum wage…
All of the above leaves a lot of room for somebody to be really pissed – go on tilt and decide to take action. With some radical and desperate slogan like “if they take away the future of our children, we’ll take theirs” or something…
So if you use this service and get into a fight in school, do these guys count as part of your klika?
People are making jokes. But I wanna ask is this business practice actually profitable? I mean Cyprus has 3000 taxi drivers and they are doing fine but the profession will start having problems in 20 years from now, as tourism is expected to drop, more people will join the profession and public transportation will become better.
Bus drivers are doing even better. They are over 1000 and most of them cooperate with state directly to transport either military or students.
Cyprus also has 155000 students in public schools/universities. Around 1/4th of them are foreigners.
In private schools/colleges/universities, I do not have numbers right now. But they must be around 30000, mainly foreigners in private universities.
So, how many people are actually going to use this? I doubt that in Cyprus this would be used more than 10000 times a year. And by that I mean, 15000 rides from house, to school and back. A school year with exams has around 150 days of actual school days. So I personally doubt there are more than 100 students whose parents would use this service in the whole island to sign annually for it. And they all would need to go to different school nationwide at the same time. So who would buy 100 cars to make this whole thing and how much would they need to charge to make a profit? I do not see it working.
I might have misunderstood the whole thing though.
b-but how will parents flex their range rover then
Be a Russian Oligarch
In Limassol we have way to many millionaire Russians owning either big villas or businesses.
This service is for them, not for Cypriots
What good is he gonna do stood on that side of the door?
The father is a well known mafioso in Cyprus
Viktor “the claw” Golubev. Source Wikipedia: “Viktor Nikolai Golubev (born february 31st 1974) is a business magnate, investor, and philanthropist…)
[Viktor with his rent-a-wives](https://ibb.co/KmyKw3m)
What does he do with his right hand!?