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financial support from UNDP, and has executed a number of projects that were
considered necessary by the communities themselves. It is at present
negotiating with the Inter-American Development Bank a loan of about
$50 million intended for social development and job creation. This poses a
difficult problem of coordination between the two agencies, which are pursuing
the same objectives.
46.
The main thrusts of the housing policy defined by the Ministry of Housing
are summarized as follows in a document entitled "A brief view of housing
policies" that was issued in April 1995:
To encourage, implement, facilitate and promote the production of
dwellings, mainly for low-income groups, with the help of the private
sector;
To lower the cost of basic construction materials by reducing planning
norms and specifications for dwelling construction, in order to enable
the private sector to produce and finance dwellings at a lower cost, so
that they will be accessible to a greater number of the poorest people in
the country;
To provide, as Ministry housing units, decent dwellings with a minimum
floor area of 42 square metres;
To establish mechanisms for obtaining loans more easily, encouraging
self-management, so as to improve the standard of living of the
population;
To facilitate the approval of land-use plans by creating a single
application centre for housing projects of social value.
C.
Specific examples of housing problems
San Miguelito
47.
The settlement of what was originally a mere hamlet began in the
early 1950s with a small group of 20 families, who were living in subhuman
conditions; it then became a town district, whose inhabitants remained very
disadvantaged. Through their bold and determined efforts, the inhabitants
secured the designation of San Miguelito as a special district by a decree
of 30 July 1970 by General Omar Torrijos. The first community assembly was
elected in August 1970 and designated representatives in 15 zones. Gradually,
and as a result of successive take-overs, San Miguelito has become a large
city, whose population is now approaching 400,000.
48.
Within San Miguelito, which covers a very large area, there are some
relatively comfortable housing zones and others which remain very precarious.
This is the case with the Santa Librada community, which the mission visited.
This community has a population of some 3,000, including 500 children, and is
suffering from three main problems: the lack of drinking-water, the lack of
an access road to serve the dwellings, and the lack of a school. The
Government is considering a project, to be financed by an FES loan. But the
essential problem, here as in many other communities, is that of the
legalization of the ownership of the land. Great uncertainty exists