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Cyprus forced to reprint all 575,000 presidential election ballot slips after candidate uses Guinness World Records logo

 

Menelaos Hadjicostis
Wednesday 30 January 2013 14:26 EST
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Cyprus has been forced to reprint all 575,000 ballot slips for next month’s presidential election after Guinness World Records objected to a candidate’s use of its logo.

The government will ask Andreas Efstratiou to pay at least €15,000 to cover reprinting costs, election commission official Demetris Demetriou told state-run Cyprus News Agency.

Mr Demetriou said Guinness had initially permitted Mr Efstratiou to use the logo in his second presidential run in 2008. Mr Efstratiou, who runs a bridal wear shop, earned a Guinness Book of World Records entry for creating the longest wedding gown train at 1,362 metres (4,468 feet) in 2007. He no longer holds the record, which now belongs to Lichel van den Ende of the Netherlands for a 2,488-metre (8,164-foot) train.

But Guinness told Mr Efstratiou to stop using the logo in 2011 and complained to Cypriot authorities when it recently found out that he had used it again.

Mr Efstratiou said he thought Guinness was being unfair, saying he believes he still can be called a record-holder despite not holding the current title.

“I’ve used this logo before several times,” he told The Associated Press. “I can use it since I’m a record-holder, I’ve got the paperwork to prove it. If an athlete wins a medal at the Olympics, do they take it back?”

He said his supporters are upset and that he would talk to his lawyer to see what action could be taken.

Mr Efstratiou has run for president twice before in 2003 and 2008, winning less than 1,000 votes in each vote. Cyprus has a population of around 900,000.

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