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  • 3
    Dec
    2012
    2:53pm, EST

    Facing eviction, family gets reprieve after landlord flees the country

    Juan Medina / Reuters

    Jorge Sanchez of Colombia empties his freezer, before learning that his family's eviction has been suspended, in his home in Madrid on Dec. 3.

    Juan Medina / Reuters

    Jenifer Martinez of Spain packs her belongings, before learning that her family's eviction has been suspended, in her home in Madrid on Dec. 3.

    Reuters -- Jenifer Martinez of Spain, along with her boyfriend Jorge Sanchez of Colombia and their three children, were packing their belongings before they were supposed to be evicted from their home in Madrid. However, their eviction has been postponed to January 2013, due to their landlord's failure to pay the mortgage to a local bank. Their landlord has since run away to Ecuador.

    Juan Medina / Reuters

    Jenifer Martinez of Spain speaks to a member of the Mortgage Victims' Platform, left, before learning that her family's eviction has been suspended, in her home's kitchen in Madrid on Dec. 3.

    Juan Medina / Reuters

    Jorge Sanchez of Colombia, right, kisses his girlfriend Jenifer Martinez of Spain after learning that their family's eviction has been suspended, in Madrid on Dec. 3.

    Juan Medina / Reuters

    Jorge Sanchez of Colombia takes down a placard outside his house after learning that his family's eviction has been suspended in Madrid on Dec. 3.

    Previously on Photoblog:

    • Spanish gypsies watch as their homes of 50 years are demolished
    • Spanish gypsies lament after homes demolished
    • Family theater struggles to avoid final curtain call in Spain
    • A family in Spain remains in limbo as they learn their eviction is suspended

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    5 comments

    Maybe the reason why the landlord failed to pay the mortgage is because the tenants ( whom this article is about ) failed to pay the rent ( which is what this article is about ). What choice does a landlord have but to evict tenants who don't pay the rent. This scenario happens on a daily basis arou …

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    Explore related topics: economy, spain, europe, madrid, housing, family, eviction
  • 5
    Nov
    2012
    6:29pm, EST

    Spanish gypsies lament after homes demolished

    Susana Vera / Reuters

    Left: Christian Gabarri sweeps the floor of a relatives' home where his family moved to after the demolition of their own home at the Spanish gypsy settlement of Puerta de Hierro, outside Madrid, Spain, Nov. 15, 2011. Right: The remains of Gabarri's home months after it was demolished, June 26, 2012.

    Photographer Susana Vera documented the demolition of a long-standing gypsy community in Spain over the course of several months. She has created diptychs that pair images from before and after the demolition, as well as tell the story of the effect on the communities, showing the demolition of houses and the displacement of families.

    Susana Vera / Reuters — Fifty four families have been living in Puerta de Hierro, on the banks of the Manzanares River, north of Madrid, for over 50 years. The settlers are registered with the local government and have access to public services, but since the summer of 2010 have been subject to evictions under orders from Madrid's town planning board, on the grounds that the dwellings are illegal. Some of the eldest members of the community have been relocated to social rent flats in the city, but often their children and grandchildren have been denied the same right, leaving them homeless. The relatives whose houses are still standing take them in while the debris keeps piling up as more demolitions take place.

    Susana Vera / Reuters

    Left: Agustin Gabarri watches television at his home in Madrid's Spanish gypsy settlement of Puerta de Hierrom, Spain, Dec. 20, 2011. Gabarri's daughter-in-law Covadonga Jimenez looking at the remains of his home the day it was demolished Feb. 15, 2012.

    Susana Vera / Reuters

    Left: Moises Echevarria and his father stand in front of a line of police after the demolition of their home in Madrid's Spanish gypsy settlement of Puerta de Hierro, Spain, Feb. 15. Right: A photo of Echevarria's cousin, Gema Gabarri, lies next to the remains of her grandparents' house, where she lived, weeks after it was demolished Aug. 11.

    Susana Vera / Reuters

    Left: Milagros Echevarria cries outside her home in Madrid's Spanish gypsy settlement of Puerta de Hierro, Spain, Jan. 20, 2012. Right: Echevarria's husband Antonio Gabarri looks at the remains of their home hours after it was demolished July 17, 2012.

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    5 comments

    The details or basis of the local orders authorizing these demolitions is not covered in the linked articles I've read, but regardless the orders appear unreasonable. Even things as potentially problematic as community wide public health violations are amenable to a fix. That the authorities didn't  …

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    Explore related topics: spain, eviction, world-news, gypsy
  • 3
    Oct
    2012
    3:49pm, EDT

    A family in Spain remains in limbo as they learn their eviction is suspended

    Juan Medina / Reuters

    Edward Hernandez Vivas holds his daughter Ariadne outside their apartment before learning that the family's eviction was suspended in Madrid on Oct. 3.

    Edward Hernandez, who came from his native Colombia to Spain in 2001 says he has not been able to keep up the payments on his Deutsche Bank mortgage since 2009. Spain announced a detailed timetable for economic reforms and a tough 2013 budget based primarily on spending cuts on last week in what many see as an effort to pre-empt the likely terms of any international bailout. A quarter of all Spanish workers are unemployed and tens of thousands have been evicted from their homes since a housing bubble burst in 2008 and plummeting consumer and business sentiment tipped the country into a four-year economic slump. The banner reads, "They save banks , they evict families".

    Also see: Spain targets London investors for "bad bank"

    -- Reuters

    Related links on PhotoBlog:

    • Eviction looms for victim of Spain's unemployment
    • Spain prepares more austerity, protesters clash with police
    • Massive anti-tax protest in Spain's Catalonia

    Juan Medina / Reuters

    Marisol Solorza, an immigrant from Ecuador (center), her daughter Gema and her granddaughter stand outside their apartment after learning that their family's eviction has been suspended, in Madrid on Oct. 3.

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    Comment

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    Explore related topics: economy, spain, eviction, world-news
  • 28
    Sep
    2012
    11:34am, EDT

    Eviction looms for victim of Spain's unemployment

    Susana Vera / Reuters

    Juan Carlos Castano, 43, turns on the TV in his emptied-out bedroom as he waits for the judicial commission to carry out his eviction in Madrid on Sept. 28.

    Susana Vera / Reuters

    Juan Carlos Castano, 43, looks through the keyhole as he waits for the judicial commission to carry out his eviction in Madrid on Sept. 28.

    Juan Carlos Castano, a Spanish national who came from his native Colombia to Spain in 2000, stopped making mortgage payments after becoming unemployed in late 2009. Spain announced a detailed timetable for economic reforms and a tough 2013 budget based primarily on spending cuts on Thursday in what many see as an effort to pre-empt the likely terms of any international bailout. A quarter of all Spanish workers are unemployed and tens of thousands have been evicted from their homes since a housing bubble burst in 2008 and plummeting consumer and business sentiment tipped the country into a four-year economic slump.

    -- Reuters

    Related links on PhotoBlog:

    • Spain prepares more austerity, protesters clash with police
    • Massive anti-tax protest in Spain's Catalonia

     

    Susana Vera / Reuters

    The phrase "United against banks" is seen in the emptied-out bedroom of Juan Carlos Castano, 43, as he waits for the judicial commission to carry out his eviction in Madrid on Sept. 28.

     

    Comment

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  • 15
    Aug
    2012
    6:27pm, EDT

    Campers evicted from settlement in Guatemala

    Rodrigo Abd / AP

    Elsy Castillo, 25, cries as she is evicted from the Jacobo Arbenz settlement by military and police personnel in Guatemala City on Aug. 15, 2012. Security forces evicted about 200 families on Monday from vacant lots in the Jacobo Arbenz settlement, which is located in front a military base. On Wednesday, forces returned to the area to remove families that didn't leave.

    Rodrigo Abd / AP

    A woman threatens a police officer with a wooden stick as she is evicted from the Jacobo Arbenz housing settlement in Guatemala City on Aug. 15.

    Jorge Dan Lopez / Reuters

    People retrieve their belongings during a military operation to evict families camping near the the Jacobo Arbenz settlement in Guatemala City on Aug. 15.

    Jorge Dan Lopez / Reuters

    A child watches military police officers evict families camping near the Jacobo Arbenz settlement in Guatemala City on Aug. 15.

    See more photos on Guatemala

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    21 comments

    I was just about to say the same thing. I don't know why those families are there. How long have they been? If I'm supposed to feel sorry for these people, at least tell me why in more than four sentences.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: guatemala, eviction, world-news, jocobo-arbenz
  • 27
    Jun
    2012
    7:42pm, EDT

    Emotions run high as eviction leads to protest in northern Spain

    Riot police try to arrest members of the "Stop Deshaucios," Stop Evictions, social movement during a protest to prevent an eviction in Oviedo, northern Spain on June 27, 2012.

    Photos and text by Eloy Alonso / Reuters:

    Protesters tried to prevent the eviction of an Ecuadorian family unable to maintain its mortgage payments in Oviedo, northern Spain. Jorge Cordero, his wife Patricia and five-month-old daughter Amanda were evicted because they could not keep up mortgage payments to the Cajastur bank. Seventeen people locked themselves in the apartment with the owner and around 200 people gathered outside to try and stop the eviction. Jorge's wife and baby daughter were not present in the apartment during the eviction. Twenty people were arrested. The plight of over one million Spanish people facing a crippling mortgage debt is increasingly attracting public support as an anti-eviction movement places pressure on politicians to act.

    Related content:

    • Spain's economic crisis turns middle-class families into illegal squatters
    • Faces of the Spanish crisis

    Activists from the "Stop Deshaucios," Stop Evictions, social movement throw buckets of water from a balcony to prevent police entry during a forced eviction.

    Riot police take cover from water thrown from balconies by protesters of an anti-eviction social movement.

    Spanish riot police restrain a member of the "Stop Deshaucios," Stop Evictions, social movement during a protest to prevent an eviction in Oviedo.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

    105 comments

    Where are these people supposed to go? Unemployment there is 25% and things are not improving. Those kinds of conditions feed revolution. Without massive reforms Europe will go bankrupt. With massive reforms you place the majority of the burden on the poor and underprivileged, unless of course the  …

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    Explore related topics: economy, spain, europe, housing, protest, debt, eviction, world-news
  • 22
    Dec
    2011
    11:05am, EST

    Facing twin tragedies: terminal illness and foreclosure

    Renee C. Byer / Sacramento Bee

    Luther Findley, 55, positions his wife Claire, 59, who suffers from ALS, with the help of a nurse's aid as she asks him to pat her back that is sore from being bedridden. He also placed a bandage on her tailbone to help with a bed sore. The quadriplegic depends on 24-hour care and wants to die in her home that was foreclosed on in March.

    By Natalia Jimenez, NBC News

    Luther and Claire Findley are confronting the difficult and painful realities brought on by terminal illness, and exacerbated by the economic crisis. Their plight and story was published in the Sacramento Bee on Dec. 18. Claire Findley was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) in early 2007, and by the end of that year Luther Findley’s once successful construction company had gone out of business. The previous year, they had refinanced their home and taken out a home equity line of credit to help pay for Claire’s escalating medical costs. That was before she was diagnosed with the chronic disease and when they thought she would still get better and be able to return to work as a nursing assistant. The Sacramento Bee reports:

    The Findleys lost their house to foreclosure in March because Luther, a 55-year-old contractor, hasn't worked since the end of 2007 – and because the income limits required for Claire to maintain her Medi-Cal coverage at no share of cost meant that he couldn't pursue new employment.

    Their situation shows what can happen when a medical crisis meets the foreclosure crisis and the spiraling effects of the recession. As a result, they represent an especially desperate economic reality: bankrupt, facing terminal illness and, until recently, coping with the stress of possible homelessness. Read the full story.

    Editor's note: Though the Findley's home was foreclosed in March, when contacted by the Sacramento Bee, Bank of America postponed their eviction until after Claire Findley's death.

    Renee C. Byer / Sacramento Bee

    Luther Findley, 55, tries to explain to the Bank of America via speaker phone that his wife wants to die in their house as he asks for an extension on his eviction from the house they have lived in since 1996. "My wife is a quadriplegic and I have no place to move her," he says. The voice on the other end says it doesn't look good but they will get back to him a few days later. The Findley's dual medical and financial crisis brought them to the brink of homelessness in what doctors say are Claire's final months of life. Barely able to speak Claire Findley wants to die at home. They lost the house to foreclosure in March of 2011, but Bank of America put their eviction on hold until his wife's death.

    Sacramento Bee photographer Renée Byer and reporter Anita Creamer worked together on telling this story. Earlier this month, Byer had been scouting around the newsroom for a story that could illustrate the effect of the financial crisis on the middle class, when Creamer approached her about the Findley's situation. Byer immediately knew she wanted to be involved. “I’m from a middle class family. It has always been a huge storyline for me. I could easily be walking in these people’s shoes.” In 2009, Byer worked on documenting the broader impact of the recession in a photo essay on the “California economy crisis.” Since then, she had wanted to explore the same topic, but through a more intimate story.

    Renee C. Byer / Sacramento Bee

    Luther Findley, 55, carries Claire's fragile body back into her bedroom after bathing her in their foreclosed home. The quadriplegic who is in constant pain wants to die at home.

    The delicate story required a sensitive approach. Byer tells msnbc.com:

    The first time I went, I really just sat and listened to their story. For me, it is very important to understand the intricacies of what they are going through. I didn’t really want to make any photographs that day. I just wanted to see how they were feeling. How could I possibly help, instead of add more stress to their situation? What can bring awareness to this horrible situation?

    Byer gained Luther’s trust after going on a long walk with him and his five pomeranians and border collie the next day. The dogs provide a small source of stress relief from his dying wife, but Luther also worries about their future. Even though Claire is barely able to speak, through her expressions Byer could sense that from the beginning Claire was very open to her presence.

    Renee C. Byer / Sacramento Bee

    Members of Carmichael Seventh Day Adventist church are helping Luther sort through all his things since his house has been foreclosed and he will be evicted after his wife Claire who suffers from ALS dies. Here he feeds his pomeranians and his border collie. The dogs help him with his depression and he says he is worried about their future after he is evicted.

    Byer has covered a range of assignments for the Sacramento Bee, but this story stands apart. She had four visits with the Findleys, and recognizes that it was very difficult to not become emotionally involved in the story.

    There was a moment where Claire had tears in her eyes as she was praying for the house. It is very hard not to feel that emotionally. It is hard to keep a dry eye. It is such an emotional toll that this couple is dealing with not only this crisis, on top of that their house is being foreclosed.

    Renee C. Byer / Sacramento Bee

    Luther Findley gazes over at his wife Claire as he sleeps most of the night on a massage table close by. "I'm blessed because I have you, " whispered Claire to her husband. Claire learned this week that her last wish to die in her modest Fair Oaks house where she and her husband Luther have lived since 1996, will be possible. The eviction that they have been so stressed about will happen after her death.

    Through Luther and Claire Findley, Byer hopes to show the severity of the financial crisis, especially when combined with the bureaucratic limitations of the system that caused it. She hopes by raising attention to situations like theirs, change will come.

    I’m really grateful for this family for opening up their hearts and letting me document them. There are thousands and thousands of families that are facing this same dilemma. Hopefully something will come of this and people in the United States will realize that this is a crisis.

    Visit the Sacramento Bee's photo gallery for the complete selection of images of Luther and Claire Findley taken by Renée Byer.

    Related links:

    • Terminally ill woman to stay in foreclosed home until she dies
    • Fund established to help Sacramento man facing eviction

    296 comments

    "...the previous year, they had refinanced their home and taken out a home equity line of credit to help pay for Claire’s escalating medical costs.""...The eviction that they have been so stressed about will happen after her death." Call it insurance, entitlement or simply Helping, but a soc …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: economy, health, eviction, us-news, recession, terminal-illness, foreclosure
  • 18
    Nov
    2011
    12:43pm, EST

    Facing evictions, unemployment and a new government in Spain

    Arturo Rodriguez / AP

    Azucena Paredes, an unemployed mother of three children, cries during her eviction in Madrid on Friday, Nov. 18, 2011. As in many European countries, Spanish mortgages are not like US-style ones in which defaulters can return the keys to the bank and walk away from their debt, albeit with their credit rating in ruins. Here, mortgage holders not only have to give the house back, but also pay off bank debt. If they cannot, upon their death it is passed on to their relatives.

    Arturo Rodriguez / AP

    Police officers are seen through peephole of Azucena Paredes's home, an unemployed mother of three children, before her eviction in Madrid, Friday on Nov. 18, 2011.

    By Natalia Jimenez, NBC News

    According to polls, it is widely expected that Spain's elections on Sunday will welcome the center-right People's Party taking over the current seven-year-old Socialist government. Many challenges face the new government, which will be taking over a country in the throws of economic distress, with unemployment rates at 21.5%. But before the Spanish see improvements, they will likely see things worsen.

    AP reports:

    The task facing the PP will be to assure markets that Spain will continue to do everything to meet its pledges to shrink the deficit.

    But a much deeper reform of the labor market, which the PP plans, and even tougher cuts needed to meet deficit targets in the year ahead, will help push the economy into recession, and send the 21.5 percent unemployment rate higher in the short-term.

    "The first half of the year will be hard because they will have to cut brutally. It will be the hardest we've seen in the crisis," said Pablo Vazquez, director of economic think-tank FEDEA.

    For the complete story: Spain recession more likely on new austerity.

    Arturo Rodriguez / AP

    Azucena Paredes' grandmother Tomasa Morcillo, 87, picks up her personal belongings as she and her family are evicted in Madrid, Friday on Nov. 18, 2011.

    Arturo Rodriguez / AP

    A protester is removed by police officers during a protest to stop the eviction of Azucena Paredes, an unemployed mother of three children, in Madrid on Friday, Nov. 18, 2011.

     

    1 comment

    Unavailable is just not fare is horrible who ever pass this law must it been on drugs. Hope someone is there to help them

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    Explore related topics: economy, spain, unemployment, eviction, world-news
  • 27
    Oct
    2011
    4:14pm, EDT

    Low-income families evicted from homes in Tegucigalpa, Honduras

    Orlando Sierra / AFP - Getty Images

    A woman helplessly watches as her home is demolished in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, on Oct. 27.

    Orlando Sierra / AFP - Getty Images

    A woman cries in front of a police officer as her shack is dismantled in Tegucigalpa on Oct. 27.

    Agence France Presse reports: 

    Human rights organizations described as inhumane the eviction of 120 families and the destruction by court order of 52 houses on El Estiquin hill, on the southern outskirts of the Honduran capital. The evicted people, mostly low-income single mothers, demanded that President Porfirio Lobo provide them with a decent place to live.

    2 comments

    How much more can these people take?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: human-rights, housing, americas, eviction, honduras, world-news, tegucigalpa

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Natalia Jimenez is a multimedia editor at NBCNews.com. She was previously a photo editor at the Star-Ledger in Newark, N.J.

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