The National - News

Abu Dhabi sends demolition notices to the owners of city’s abandoned buildings

- HANEEN DAJANI

Owners of abandoned buildings in Abu Dhabi have been ordered to demolish them or risk police interventi­on and fines.

Last week, the municipali­ty issued demolition orders to 14 building owners and gave them two weeks to carry out the notice.

Failure to tear down the buildings within the allotted time could lead to police interventi­on, forced demolition and fines of between Dh1,000 and Dh50,000, depending on the size of the building, a municipali­ty official said.

The orders come at a time when the municipali­ty is clamping down on abandoned buildings because of the security threat they pose.

“Abandoned houses could be used for prostituti­on, or bootleggin­g,” an official said.

He said tearing down the buildings would keep absconding workers from taking advantage of them, young people taking part in illegal activities there and people potentiall­y running illegal businesses from the premises.

“This is very risky, especially in residentia­l areas, young people could go there to consume drugs behind their parents’ backs, it could also house dangerous wild animals, like dogs and scorpions.”

This year, the municipali­ty carried out a similar campaign in the Muroor Zafaranah area.

“The owners [who did not demolish their buildings] were fined, and still under notificati­on to remove them,” he said.

The National visited some of the recently abandoned buildings in Mussaffah’s M10 and M11 and found them to be derelict.

Rubbish and rat droppings littered a corridor leading to a dozen rooms on the second floor of a shabby building in M10. There were, however, a few shops on the ground floor

that were still in operation. Faisal Sayed, who was looking after a friend’s shop in the same building, said they had not had power for a while.

He said the rooms upstairs had been abandoned for about two months.

Dirty slippers were scattered around the building along with mattresses and a full water tank.

Mr Sayed said the workers who lived there all left after being involved in a court case.

A second building in the same area looked worse than the first.

Birds flew through broken windows on the top floor and the shops downstairs were lined with a thick layer of dirt.

Among the abandoned items was a broken washing machine filled with soaked clothes.

Outside, tyres were stacked on top of a pile of rubble and an old toilet was discarded in a pit.

Industrial diggers filled one of the shops on the ground floor. The door to another shop was left open with an abandoned office desk complete with dirty cups and sauces and a working fridge still in place.

Saif bin Darwish Al Kutbi was one of the landlords whose name was included in the municipali­ty ad, notifying him that he needed to demolish his property at M14.

He said the ad was a mistake. Mr Al Kutbi’s property is used as a storage area for more than 100 vehicles worth millions of dirhams. He said the fence around the property used to be old and shabby but he renovated it six months ago after receiving the first notice from the municipali­ty, which was posted on his shop fence.

“It has been maintained and renewed so they won’t demolish it. It is a store that has assets inside,” he said.

He had not contacted the municipali­ty, he said, because no one had spoken to him directly.

“They did not speak to anyone or hand over the notificati­on to the watchman or anything, they just pasted it on the door; it says that civil defence told them this was an unsafe place and should be shut down.

“This is an unprofessi­onal way to notify an investor who’s been there for decades.”

He claimed that the last plot of land mentioned in the ad under “no records” – plot P4 in M1 – is owned by the municipali­ty itself.

 ??  ?? An abandoned building in Mussaffah Antonie Robertson / The National
An abandoned building in Mussaffah Antonie Robertson / The National

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