Zena Ekada, 42, said her leg was desperate for the habitable state of temporary accommodation in which she was placed by the Lambeth Council in an external district in London since January.
The mother of three of three who does not use the gas pot on the property for safety reasons were noticed, leaving her family to live from food and food to carry, except on weekends when she can cook a meal in the houses of friends.
The belongings of Mrs. Ekada remain unpacked due to mice infestation A mouse infestation means that the family has not been able to unpack most of its belongings, which remain stacked in the property rooms of the property about three months after moving.
Meanwhile, Mrs. Ekada and her two daughters and son are confined to the rooms above.
In statements at the service of local democracy reports (LDRS) in the Chamber last Thursday (April 3), he said: “We didn’t have a bath for four weeks. We had to make poop in container bags in the rear garden. [For] Four weeks nobody listed.
Mrs. Ekada and Re -Family have to live up, since their beliefs cannot unpack due to infestation
“We do not enter the kitchen of. The mice here have a leg eating [everything]. They began to dig. They play. They are everywhere. It’s amazing.
‘If we use the gas, the house will explode’
“We have a leg to use the gas. If we use the gas, the house will explode. We live with canned food and carry them carry them. When I go to my friends the weekend, I try to cook.”
Mrs. Ekada said that her attempts to make the property management agent solve maintenance problems has fallen into deaf ears or results in builders that carry out failed works that are the underlying problems.
She said that emails for Lambeth’s staff were not answered, although her local MP wrote to the Council that described the conditions within her property as a “clear danger of health and environment” and urged officials to transfer it.
The social worker of Mrs. Ekada in another district of London and a family dissemination worker in the local primary school of her young man has also written to the council that she expresses with the state of her accommodation and the impact she is having on the health of the family.
She said that her son suffered hive shoots, which she thinks are due to stress linked to the bad conditions in which they lived, while the Botters have contracted UTES since they moved home. Mrs. Ekada, meanwhile, is taking medications for hypertension.
She said: “We are in constant antibiotics and medications. I can continuously.
The family has lived in at least six different temporary accommodation properties since they were evicted from their old house in Britton 19 years ago.
They have had to leave some previous properties after their son was attacked by gangs.
On one occasion, he used missing and was found in a house more than 100 miles selling drugs in an English city.
Lambeth’s council said it was “extremely unfortunate” for the problems that Mrs. Ekada’s family had experienced with her last temporary accommodation placement and said she was chasing that they complain about those who stayed with property agents.
A spokesman added: “In the Meanmefue, Lambeth is working with Mrs. Ekada to find an adequate alternative property where the family could feel safe.
“Unfortunately, due to family groups about security, the area in which they have to be is very small and is an extremely difficult test to find the accommodation.
“We will continuously do our best to help all families such as Mrs. Ekadas, who come to use noving novice on their heads.
“The number of homeless households supported by the Council has increased by 50 percent in the last two years, and Lambeth now provides temporary accommodation for more than 4,700 homeless homes every night.
“The cost of accommodating homeless families in accommodation during the night has increased to more than 100 million a year, and there are more than 35,000 homes on our waiting list for social homes.”