E/C.12/69/D/48/2018
6.6
The State party is of the view that article 11 of the Covenant does not protect
individuals who are illegally occupying the property of another. The right to own property,
individually or with others, is set forth in article 17 of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights and article 33 of the State party’s Constitution. Protecting property, considered
internationally to be a fundamental human right, ensures that property owners are able to
satisfy their basic needs; they must therefore be protected from arbitrary deprivation of their
property. Accordingly, article 11 (1) of the Covenant cannot be used to sanction instances
where the property of others is unlawfully appropriated, as in the present case. Moreover, in
its general comment No. 7 (1997), the Committee recognizes that evictions are sometimes
justifiable, such as in cases of squatting, although they must be carried out in accordance with
the law, with adequate legal remedies available to those affected, in a timely manner and in
the presence of competent officials.
6.7
The State party argues that the right to housing is not an absolute right to a particular
dwelling owned by another person, nor is it an absolute right to be provided with housing by
the authorities, if public resources are insufficient for the provision of such housing. The
State party considers that article 25 (1) of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and
article 11 (1) of the Covenant do not recognize an enforceable, subjective right, but rather
establish a mandate for States to take appropriate measures to promote public policies aimed
at improving access to decent housing for everyone. According to the case law of the Court
of Justice of the European Union, 5 the right enshrined in article 34 (3) of the Charter of
Fundamental Rights of the European Union is not the right to housing but rather the right to
housing assistance within the framework of social policies based on article 153 of the Treaty
on the Functioning of the European Union. This State mandate has been expressly recognized
in article 47 of the Constitution and various statutes of autonomy. In line with this article and
according to the case law of the Constitutional Court,6 the right to housing is “a constitutional
mandate or guiding principle” that calls primarily for social measures but does not in itself
constitute a separate area of competence of the State. It is therefore the duty of the public
authorities to create the conditions and establish the standards that will enable Spaniards to
exercise their right to decent and adequate housing; the authorities do so, in particular, by
regulating land use for the common good in order to prevent speculation. As the right is one
that is realized progressively, the State party is in full compliance with its international
obligations in the area and refers to the statements it has made in connection with
communications similar to the present one on its efforts in the area of housing.
6.8
The Autonomous Community of Madrid, the regional government authority involved
in the present case, has a Social Housing Agency that manages its social housing stock.
Housing is allocated by means of the procedure set out in Decree No. 52/2016. To be eligible
for special needs housing, an applicant must be an adult or an emancipated minor, have
income that is no more than 3.5 times the Government’s multipurpose indicator for income
(which was €537.84 a month in 2018), not have been awarded public housing within the 10
preceding years, not be the outright owner of another property, live or work in the
Community of Madrid, and not be occupying a property without the right to do so or the
consent of the owner. Individuals considered to be in a situation of special need making them
eligible for priority housing include those who have been evicted, those who are victims of
violence, those living in homes of poor, substandard or inadequate quality, and those living
in homes where the rent is more than 30 per cent of the family income. Applications are
reviewed and scored using a common scale and housing is allocated according to availability,
in the order of the scores obtained, which reflect the financial, personal and social
circumstances of the family units concerned.
6.9
In the present case, the authors unlawfully gained access to a property and claim that
article 11 (1) provides protection for this unlawful occupation. The right to housing clearly
cannot be used as a cover for unlawful acts. The State party points out that the authorities
have acted in accordance with the resources they have available, the laws governing the
allocation of public housing and the principles of equality, transparency and competition,
5
6
6
Sánchez Morcillo and Abril García v. Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA, order of the Court of
Justice of the European Union C-539/14 of 16 July 2015, para. 49.
Constitutional Court judgments No. 152/1988, No. 7/2010 and No. 33/2019.
GE.21-04761