The 'antiokupas' law of the PP that proposes evictions in 24 hours is being debated in Congress

BREAKING

MADRID, 27 Nov.

MADRID, 27 Nov. (EUROPA PRESS) -

The Popular Party will take this Tuesday to the Plenary Session of Congress a proposal for an organic law to regulate the problem of 'squatting' with measures such as ensuring that the eviction is "immediate", that the 'squatters' cannot be registered in these homes and that the penalties are tougher in the event that this practice is promoted by mafias.

Specifically, the 'popular' regulate that the eviction be done "immediately" in the event that the situation is one of flagrant crime and, in the event that it is not, within a maximum period of 24 hours.

Likewise, they request the "recovery of the crime of usurpation of real estate with penalties of up to 3 to 5 years so that precautionary measures can be taken" and that the 'squatters' cannot be registered in the 'squatted' property or have access to " certain benefits.

With this new regulation, the first opposition party proposes enabling the communities of owners as legal persons so that they can start the processes because "many times they are the first" to identify the 'squatting'.

On November 3, the Plenary already rejected a motion in which the PP summarized all these 'antiokupas' recipes and that it agreed with Vox and Ciudadanos, the only groups that supported it. The forecast is that the same will happen on Tuesday with his proposed law.

We use cookie to make our content better.