Paris, France, la manifestation pour protester contre les expulsions de logement forcé, foule de femmes africaines marcher sur la rue avec des pancartes
2736 x 3648 px | 23,2 x 30,9 cm | 9,1 x 12,2 inches | 300dpi
Date de la prise de vue:
12 mars 2011
Lieu:
Paris, France,
Informations supplémentaires:
Cette image peut avoir des imperfections car il s’agit d’une image historique ou de reportage.
This year, March 15 marked the end of the winter break on forced housing expulsions, Resuming evictions without rehousing, the anguish for tens of thousands of families and individuals to be thrown into the street by the force and falling into the exclusion will renew ... Each year, the government accelerates a little more procedures for property owners support, each year, and evictions are growing- they are up 50% since 2002 ... Tenants accessing small apartments are overwhelmed by soaring rents, expenses, - energy, real estate and land taxes, which have never been so expensive in our country. It's a scam: more and more young people, employees of precarious situations, single mothers ... must spend more than half of their salary. Now rising energy prices, health or fresh produce, combined with rising unemployment, job insecurity, low income (benefits, wages, pensions ...) and strengthening of inequalities, already hard hit, affect the masses. Because of financial disengagement of the state, social housing production remains at a very low level, not including demolition and sales imposed by the government. By cons, he spends 10 times more to help wealthy taxpayers to buy homes and rent them at high prices. The com modification of housing is underway. The laws protecting renters are attacked and rentals continuously rise, with the proliferation of precarious status. Public housing tenants are now threatened. The government says the retirement rental, profits from property speculation and land at the expense of housing rights. The Boutin Law multiplied by three times the number of expulsions. Donors, relayed by the Attali report, calling for a "softening" of the evictions is to say an "acceleration". The Hortefeux Law (LOPPSI2) allows the Warden to evict the occupiers after 48 hours in a housing "non standard" (yurts, cabins, tents, shantytowns, caravans, houses without permits, mobile home ...) without notice and to destroy their homes. Approximately 200