E/C.12/69/D/48/2018
1.1
The author of the communication is Soraya Moreno Romero, a Spanish national born
on 8 March 1987. The author is acting on her own behalf and on behalf of her three minor
children, born in 2008, 2014 and 2018. She claims that the State party has violated her rights
and those of her children under article 11 (1) of the Covenant. The Optional Protocol entered
into force for the State party on 5 May 2013. The author is not represented by counsel.
1.2
In the present Views, the Committee will first summarize the information and the
arguments submitted by the parties, without taking a position. It will then consider the
admissibility and merits of the communication and, lastly, set out its conclusions.
A.
Summary of the information and arguments submitted by the parties
The facts as submitted by the author1
Before the communication was registered
2.1
Until May 2015, the author had lived with her minor children in the home of some
relatives. Because the space was overcrowded and she had limited financial means, 2 she
decided that month to begin squatting in a property belonging to a financial institution. While
she was negotiating with the institution to enter into a social rental agreement, the property
was sold to an investment company.
2.2
On 25 March 2016, the author applied for social housing to the Autonomous
Community of Madrid, the regional government authority. Her application file was later
closed because not all the documents requested had been received. The author filed an
administrative appeal against this decision.
2.3
On 21 November 2017, the investment company that owned the property occupied by
the author pressed charges against her for the minor offence of occupying the property of
another without authorization.
2.4
On 30 January 2018, Madrid Court of Investigation No. 30 found the author guilty of
the minor offence of occupying the property of another without authorization and ordered
her to pay a fine calculated at a rate of €2 a day over three months and to vacate the property.
In its decision, the Court stated that it could not consider the possibility of fully or partially
exculpating the author owing to her state of need because she had not shown that she had
exhausted all other possible means of accessing housing before resorting to the unlawful
conduct of occupying property without the right to do so. In particular, the Court noted that
the author had not shown that she had approached social services before she moved into the
property.
2.5
On 19 April 2018, Madrid Provincial High Court upheld the lower court’s decision in
its entirety.
2.6
On 23 April 2018, the Court ordered that the decision be enforced and, if the author
had still not vacated the property, that she be evicted. On 11 May 2018, the author requested
that the eviction be postponed by one month so that she could find alternative housing. As
the party seeking enforcement did not oppose the request, the eviction was postponed on 29
May 2018.
2.7
On 30 May 2018, the author applied to the Community of Madrid for social rental
housing under the special scheme for social emergencies.
2.8
On 30 July 2018, the author was notified by the municipal police that, unless she
voluntarily vacated the property beforehand, the eviction order would be carried out on 20
August 2018 at 10 a.m.
1
2
2
These facts have been reconstructed on the basis of the individual communication and the information
subsequently provided by the parties in their observations and comments on the merits of the
communication.
The author had been receiving €587.78 a month since June 2012 under the minimum subsistence
income scheme. On 30 July 2018, the author started receiving a monthly allowance of €24.25 per
child. She has no other sources of income.
GE.21-04761