Slum-like conditions for evicted Roma families

Eliška Bártová Eliška Bártová
10. 3. 2008 20:30
Families evicted from Vsetín may end up homeless
This is supposed to be a bathroom, believes the local town hall
This is supposed to be a bathroom, believes the local town hall | Foto: Ludvík Hradilek

Jeseníky - Roma families evicted from Vsetín two years ago are living in tumble-down and damp houses that nobody comes to repair. So they decided not to pay rent anymore.

"I won't be paying for this shanty anymore," claimed Eva Žigová in a room that has been flooded in January. "Nobody came to repair it, I have stopped sending my rent in November. Let a distrainer come here, I don't care; let Čunek inhabit the house," she said.

Jiří Čunek was a mayor of Vsetín who decided to have local Roma families evicted. He became the Minister of Regional Development, but he quit after numerous scandals. Currently, his re-appointment to the post is being discussed.

Threatened with distraint

The families Čunek has evicted now face a real threat of distraint.

According to the agreement they have signed with the authorities of Vsetín, in case they fail to pay rent once, they would need to pay off the whole sum they owe, therefore ten thousands of euro.

Since they cannot pay such a sum, they would inevitably find themselves homeless.

A door in the only heated room in the house opens as a small boy with a schoolbag bursts in. After sharpening his pencil with a knife, he begins to write his homework. Since he enjoys attending school, he is done quickly.

Adrian has grown up in Vsetín, however now he is living in Vlčice, a small village in Jesenice, because his family was evicted from their home in Vsetín two years ago.

No member of the household sees the place as home, though. 

On top of that, the family is now broken since all men have left it. "Our daddy is not living with us anymore," explained one of the daughters as she is putting fuel into a stove. "My husband became sick of this all," said Eva Žigová. "Together with his relatives, he moved to Slovakia. He tried to make us go with him, but my family is in Vsetín."

Doing homework in a damp room that was flooded in January
Doing homework in a damp room that was flooded in January | Foto: Ludvík Hradilek

No electricity, no hot water, no toilet

Eva Žigová is living in an unmaintained house with five children all alone.

The toilet in the house is out of order, so is the sewage system. There is no hot water, electricity is cut off. In winter, there was no water for two months.

The family spent their Christmas in Vsetín. After they come back, they have found one room filled with water from a creek that flows through their garden.

Now, they use musty clothes as fuel for the oven. As they have no toilets, they have to go outside. Moreover, the mayor threatened the mother to take her children away because of terrible conditions they are forced to live in.

"It was Čunek who got me into this situation. I am paying for this 2,500 CZK (100 euro) to Vsetín every month," complained Žigová. "They cannot ask me to pay this much money for a house in this state, and let them take away my children? I have not been paying them anything since November."

"I don't know what to do"

Eva Žigová and her family have been living in Vlčice for two years
Eva Žigová and her family have been living in Vlčice for two years | Foto: Ludvík Hradilek

Last year, the family was being visited by a social worker. However, this year the municipality hasn't received a grant to pay her. So, Eva Žigová is on her own now.

"We have been living in a house of our relatives in Stará Červená Voda," she said. "But there were just too many people living in the house, so we went back. I don't know what to do."

After her maternity leave has ended, she could not find work. The region of Jeseník they have been evicted to struggles with high rates of unemployment.

Trying their luck in Britain

Even other Roma family that has been evicted from Vsetín is unable to settle down in their new place.

Their new house in Stará Červená Voda is unoccupied for the most part. Some members of the Kandráč family left for Great Britain, the rest live back in Vsetín," explained Josef Podlaha, the mayor of Stará Červená Voda.

"I haven't seen them since mid-January," said Podlaha.

A Roma family from Vidnava found a refuge in Britain too.

"They left after the police said Čunek didn't commit any crime (by evicting them)," explained an activist that deals with Roma-related issues Václav Zástěra. "There is one more lawsuit against Čunek to be discussed by the court. They can return after that."

Other tenants are now living in the house they have left. However, these new inhabitants decided to stop paying back their loan to Vsetín.

Eva Žigová is living with her three children. Her husband has left for Slovakia
Eva Žigová is living with her three children. Her husband has left for Slovakia | Foto: Ludvík Hradilek

"We have been paying 1,800 CZK (72 euro) monthly for the Kandráč family," explained Eva Horvátová who is now occupying the flat with her husband and six children.

"However, my social benefits are reduced since the beginning of the year so I cannot afford to pay the rent anymore."

Their house is far from ideal place to live - they have no hot water and the electricity is only provisional.

"Evictions? A mere populist act"

According to Renata Köttnerová, a coordinator for Roma-issues in Olomouc Region, it is apparent that the situation of the families has worsened after their eviction.

"Definitely, it hasn't contributed to their stabilization," said Köttnerová. "They are still being attracted by Vsetín, they will never feel home outside the city. One of the reasons why they fell alienated is they have moved here involuntarily."

The mayor of Stará Červená Voda, a place one of the families has been moved to, is equally skeptical.

"They have been used to living in the city for decades, they are not able to live in the countryside," said mayor Podlaha. "They are visiting their relatives in Vsetín frequently as they struggle or maintain their family ties."

According to the mayor, the eviction was nothing else than an act of mere populism that hasn't brought any effect.

"I understand such a hardline attitude as a warning for the rest of their community," said Podlaha. "According to me, Vsetín above all wanted to tell them they are going to meet the same end as these families if they won't behave."

Requests for payments

However, the town hall of Vsetín is satisfied with the result and doesn't see any failure on their side.

"These families should have been living on the street for a long time," said a spokeswoman Eva Stejskalová. "We have accommodated their needs."

Now, Vsetín is preparing its next step. The town hall has sent requests for payments to all families that are not paying rent anymore.

"If they don't pay, we will be assertive," said Stejskalová. "We will claim our money by law, or possibly we would pursue a distraint. We would repudiate agreements rigorously and sell the houses."

 

Právě se děje

Další zprávy