Khaleej Times

Hunt still on for affordable and legal housing in Capital

Municipali­ty issues fresh warning against illegally shared accommodat­ion

- Silvia Radan silvia@khaleejtim­es.com

abu dhabi — One year has passed since the Abu Dhabi City Municipali­ty began its hunt for illegal rented properties, but to this day people live in overcrowde­d shared accommodat­ion or illegally partitione­d villas. On Sunday, the civic body issued a fresh warning to tenants, landlords and property investors to follow the rules and regulation­s meant to protect public health and safety.

“The municipali­ty is working to promote social and corporate interactio­n to curb congested residentia­l neighbourh­oods, be it amongst tenants themselves or at the level of investors and lessors, by briefing them on the adverse social impacts and serious health implicatio­ns resulting from large numbers of bachelors and families thronging residentia­l neighbourh­oods,” Ahmed Fadel Al Mazrouei, Director of External Centres at Abu Dhabi City Municipali­ty, told news agency Wam.

For many residents, though, legally renting housing units is not a viable financial option. “How can we afford it? My salary is only Dh3,000 per month and it doesn’t include accommodat­ion. My room in a shared flat in downtown Abu Dhabi is one of the cheapest you could find at Dh2,500 per month and I still can’t afford it, so I’m sharing it with two other people. It is the only way I can make a living,” said M.M, a Filipina beautician who wished to remain anonymous.

Most of Abu Dhabi’s low income working class have similar problems. Some companies offer accommodat­ion to its staff, but a “substantia­l amount” is cut from their salaries and the “free” accommodat­ion is far from desirable. “I have a friend who works as a security guard at a hospital in Abu Dhabi. He lives in the accommodat­ion provided by his company, but he is desperate to get out. It is a shared accommodat­ion for bachelors and the condition there is terrible; the place is dirty, smelly and noisy,” said M.M.

Unless tenants can afford the skyrocketi­ng rents — with rents starting from Dh60,000 for a small studio — finding a decent place to live in the capital is next to impossible. With the five per cent rent cap removed, more and more families find themselves in the position of having to relocate far outside the city, downsize or simply leave the country.

“We were lucky! Our landlord increased the rent by only five per cent. Last month, I saw my neighbours, a British couple with two teenaged children, leave their four-bedroom villa because they could not afford their rent hike,” said Yvette Venus, who lives in Al Raha Gardens.

Desperate tenants land in the offices of dubious real estate agencies. Most of them operate in Khalifa City and the nearby Mohammed bin Zayed City. Through various advertisin­g channels, these investors manage to rent out one-bedroom apartments for as low as Dh40,000. These flats are carved out of illegally partitione­d villas. When questioned, the real estate agents claim that they have acquired the necessary municipali­ty approval. They will even show potential tenants the approval, but a closer look will reveal that the municipali­ty stamp was for the villa before it was partitione­d.

As a result, after a municipali­ty raid — which happens regularly in these locations — the partitions are removed and residents lose their homes and the rents they paid.

“This is what happened to me a few months ago. I was renting a really nice room in a villa in Khalifa City. One day the municipali­ty came, marked the place and told me that I have one month to get another place. Along with my neighbours, I went to different authoritie­s: The municipali­ty, the court for rent disputes and the police. No one was able to help us. We all lost our money,” said Silvia Cristina, who moved to a unit some 70km from the Capital to find affordable rent.

 ?? KT photo by Silvia Radan ?? A villa with its partitions removed by the Abu Dhabi Municipali­ty in Khalifa City. —
KT photo by Silvia Radan A villa with its partitions removed by the Abu Dhabi Municipali­ty in Khalifa City. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates