The National - News

FIRE DEATHS HIGHLIGHT BLIGHT OF ILLEGAL HOUSING

▶ Authoritie­s have found up to 70 people living together in one house

- SALAM AL AMIR

Overcrowdi­ng in Sharjah homes is in the spotlight after the death this week of a woman and her son in a fire that also injured 64 others.

The cause of the fire in Maysaloon has yet to be revealed, but the human cost was exacerbate­d by the high density of residents living in the property – the old house had been partitione­d to create almost 60 rooms that were sub-let to as many as 66 people.

Overcrowdi­ng raises the risk of fire, not least because of faulty wiring in extension cords, which are widely used to maximise the use of space.

The problem, however, is barely visible to the outside world.

Areas such as Maysaloon are made up of single-floor old houses and two-storey to three-storey buildings. The highest level of overcrowdi­ng is among Asian nationals, and in one case in 2015, 70 workers were found living in one house, with up to 15 people sharing a room.

One four-bedroom villa in the area is home to 18 men, including Indian Basheer Ahmad, 45, who has been living there for 15 years.

He shares a room with four other men, including Yasser Arafat, 37, also from India, who works near by.

Each man pays approximat­ely Dh600 per month, an amount they say is a fraction of what they would be paying for a better apartment accommodat­ing fewer tenants. They say it is affordable and within walking distance of work.

“It is unsafe – we are aware of that, but what can we do?

“Other places won’t allow single men to move in, and the options for us are located far away and transport would consume our income and time,” said another resident, Safiraddin Mohammed, 28.

He said that in summer they bore the brunt of the staggering heat because their old airconditi­oning unit barely works. Paying for a new one would cost them money and moving to another residence would cost them time.

Most housing for single men is on the outskirts of Maysaloon, and even if employers paid for transport, the time lost in traffic would remain an issue that could eventually cost these men their jobs, according to Mr Mohammed.

Licensing conditions are often breached by the use of wooden or cardboard partitions to modify the properties.

Sharjah Municipali­ty regularly runs campaigns to eliminate illegal housing. It said that some rogue landlords knew their property had been modified and sub-let to low-paid workers, yet did nothing.

“I call on landlords to compare the amount of money they make from allowing these partition modificati­ons with what they will end up paying for repairs if, God forbid, a fire guts it and legal action is taken against them. It’s not worth the risk,” said Khalid Al Suwaidi, assistant general manager of customer service at Sharjah Municipali­ty.

The municipali­ty will soon be introducin­g technology to detect overcrowdi­ng in homes, but in the meantime it appealed to tenants not to risk their lives or those of others by living in unsafe housing when safer, legal options are available.

“In some arrangemen­ts, unrelated men and women have been found living in the same property, which is a safety threat. People could be robbed or assaulted because they don’t know who they are living with,” he said.

“We are not trying to tighten the noose on people.

“On the contrary, we aim to protect them, maintain their safety and that of other tenants in the same area, and preserve homes from the damage that may occur as a result of unapproved and unsafe modificati­ons.”

 ?? Reem Mohammed / The National ?? The house where a deadly fire broke out on Monday night in Maysaloon, Sharjah
Reem Mohammed / The National The house where a deadly fire broke out on Monday night in Maysaloon, Sharjah

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