Bilbao - 53-year-old Amaia Egaña was to be evicted from her home in Barakaldo, Bilbao, Spain. Rather than face homelessness, she jumped to her death from her balcony.
Egaña jumped
from her fourth floor balcony just as the bailiffs prepared to evict
her, after she failed to keep her mortgage payments up to date. This is
the second suicide in less than three weeks over impending evictions.
According to the organizers, 8,000 people took to the street on Friday
in Barakaldo, a suburb of Bilbao in the Basque region of Spain. Chants
and banners stated condemnation of the suicide of Egaña and protested
any further foreclosures. Demonstrators shouted slogans such as ''No
eviction unanswered,'' ''Banker, remember – we have rope'', "it is not a
suicide, it's a homicide," and "we must stop financial terrorism".
Organizers of the Stop Eviction march have called for immediate action
by Madrid to end foreclosures and they blamed the suicide on Spain's
economic hardship. According to estimates, more than 400,000 families
have lost their homes since the start of the financial crisis in Spain.
On Thursday this week, the EU Court of Justice criticized the mortgage
law in Spain, which governs evictions, and called for a halt to the
repossession of property. The court states that the legislation is
incompatible with European consumer protection standards. In Spain, not
only can someone be evicted for non-payment of their mortgage, but they
also remain liable to repay whatever value is left on the mortgage
after the repossession.
Two
similar events have occurred recently including 53-year-old José Miguel
Domingo, who was found dead in Granada on October 25, immediately after
bailiffs appeared on his doorstep. The following day yet another
53-year-old jumped from his apartment window ahead of an eviction in
Burjassot, but survived the fall.
Spanish news agency, EFE reports that on Monday,
Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy will be meeting with the opposition
PSOE party in an effort to halt evictions.
The PSOE hope to introduce a new law where evictions would be halted if a
family only owns one home. "We ask the government and banks to halt
all housing evictions until we have a new law," Socialist Elena
Valenciano said.
Read more: http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/336545#ixzz2BoSuVc2I
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