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Twickenham shelter resident fights to get moldy food house back | Local news | News | Twickenham Nub News

Ealing resident Ahmed Malik owns a house in a quiet suburb of Hanwell.

The two-bedroom home is where she raised her children and serves as an anchor to a community she’s known for more than a decade, but the homeowner says she’s been sleeping in a homeless shelter for months.

Malik says he has not been able to access his home for almost four years after entering into a settlement with Ealing Council.

During that time, the condition of the property has disintegrated, mold has taken over much of the walls of the apartment, the once well-kept gardens are covered with nettles, thorns and weeds, the door locks are damaged, the plasterwork is chipped, the empty rooms look like a shambles. building rather than a family home.

The landlord says he is heartbroken by the state his home has been left in and blames the council for not doing better to protect it.

During the Covid pandemic, Malik says he has reached an agreement with the council and lettings agency Longstar Estates to rent the flat for a year to a council tenant.

The lease would start at the end of April 2021 and end at the same time a year later. However, more than two years after the deal expired, Malik has not been given his property back.

He explained: “This is my main residence and they made me homeless. I gave them a rental contract during the Covid period, but when I wanted it back, they didn’t give it to me”.

Malik had agreed to be part of a scheme towards the end of the pandemic which would allow the council to place vulnerable people in temporary private tenancies.

The landlord explained that he and his family had left the property to stay with relatives outside London during the pandemic and decided to help someone vulnerable through the scheme rather than trying to find a private tenant.

“It seemed like a good deal, they take it for a year, house someone homeless and then return it in the same condition.”

Ahmed’s house has deteriorated since being rented to Ealing Council (Credit: Facundo Arrizabalga/MyLondon)

However, he was in shock after the lease expired and expected it to be returned only to wait some more.

“I have handed in my notice to resign and now I have to go to court,” he added.

Malik says the delays have left him homeless for over two years.

“I couch-surfed for a while and was in a homeless shelter in Twickenham for months,” he told the Local Democracy Reporting Service.

The scheme Malik agreed to is Ealing Council’s private sector leasing, which is explained on its website.

Details on the web page included: “At the end of the tenancy, if you do not wish to extend the tenancy, you will receive the freehold property back.”

It describes the process as “hassle-free” and offers landlords “ongoing rent management – free of charge”.

The page also makes it clear that any repairs to the property are the responsibility of the owner.

Malik says the damage to the property during the more than three years it has had a council tenant will cost him tens of thousands.

On entering the property for the first time in several years, Malik told LDRS he was “broken” by the state of his home. He blames the council for not taking steps to ensure his tenant respected his home.

However, thanks to the agreement, the council and the tenant also said he bears some responsibility for the condition of the flat, particularly the worsening mold problem.

Speaking to LDRS, the tenant said she was also looking to leave the apartment.

Before picture of the living room of the property, pre-molding, Hanwell (credit: Ahmed Malik).

“I wanted to (leave) for so long. The property is full of damp, I haven’t had a toilet for a year because it broke, there are snails everywhere, it’s really bad.”

“Between us, he wants his property back and I want out. I’ve been living in a hotel for three months (because) the ceiling collapsed.”

The tenant said that everything she brought with her to the apartment had to be thrown away after it was destroyed by moisture.

“I complained about damp for two to two and a half years. I’m not going to be proud of a property where I had to go through all the furniture in the bin.”

“We live out of bags because everything we originally had was destroyed.” The tenant says three months after moving in, the apartment was full of mold and damp, which she said made it “unlivable.”

Despite all parties wanting the same thing, Malik has had to go through the courts, which Ealing Council explains has been put off by the repairs they need to carry out.

READ MORE: ‘If I pay it will be a fight’: Resident urges Ealing Council to act as tree comes down

A spokesman for Ealing Council said: “We regret the long delay in returning Mr Malik’s property, which he let out through our private sector leasing scheme. The property was managed by a managing agent and let through a council tenant.

“In any case like this, there needs to be a legal process that allows possession to be returned to the owner, to protect the tenant’s rights.

“Court delays due to post-pandemic backlogs have made this process last up to three years.

“After a court hearing was eventually scheduled, it became clear that there had been recent damage to the building that required repairs, so the current tenant was moved out to allow the repairs to be completed by the managing agents and by the owner, which further delayed the process.

“Legally, the work must be completed before the court’s foreclosure action can take place.”

The spokesman added that a hearing was due to take place on Friday (July 5) and that it was hoped the delays would be “resolved as soon as possible”.

Longstar Estates manages the property on behalf of Ealing Council and it is the council’s responsibility to evict the tenant.

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