The National - News

Illegal overcrowdi­ng is a lethal blight on our cities

▶ Those who put personal gain before the safety of others must be held responsibl­e

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The deaths of a mother and her seven-year-old son in a house fire in Sharjah serve as grim reminders of the perils of illegal sub-letting and overcrowdi­ng, a stubbornly persistent problem in the cities of the UAE. The building had been divided into sublet units and 64 people were injured in the blaze. Overcrowdi­ng blights neighbourh­oods and strains utilities, including water, sewage and electricit­y. Crude partitioni­ng, dangerousl­y extended electrical wiring and ad hoc cooking arrangemen­ts are a recipe for disaster. This isn’t the first time overcrowdi­ng has led to tragedy and, unless firm action is taken, it won’t be the last.

In 2008, 11 men died in a fire in a two-storey villa in Naif, Dubai, which had been occupied by about 500 people crammed into multiple sub-divided rooms. In 2016, Abu Dhabi municipali­ty recorded more than 3,300 violations of housing law, warning of hazardous living conditions created by unscrupulo­us landlords or agents. The problem is not confined to the older, less affluent districts of the cities. Last year Dubai authoritie­s stepped in after residents in the upmarket Jumeirah Lake Towers developmen­t complained that many properties were being illegally sublet. One small apartment was found to have been divided into eight tiny rooms.

This is not a failure of regulation, but of enforcemen­t. The laws are clear, and the penalties severe – in Abu Dhabi both residents and landlords face fines of up to Dh100,000 each if more than three tenants are found to be sharing one room. It is difficult to blame the low-paid worker, understand­ably happy to take advantage of cheap accommodat­ion, no matter how mean or hazardous it might be. The true culprits are those who exploit them.

Thanks to mandatory registrati­on schemes, such as Tawtheeq in Abu Dhabi and Ejari in Dubai, all rental properties and their associated contracts must be registered, and the regulation­s on overcrowdi­ng are set out clearly. Those who choose to flout them, abandoning their moral and legal responsibi­lities, and putting personal gain above the safety of individual­s and entire communitie­s, must feel the full weight of the law.

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