The land occupied by the family in Hualpén seeks to be used by the Serviu to build a housing project of 200 houses. For their part, those who live on the site accused a violent eviction that was paralyzed by the Justice.
Justice paralyzed the eviction of a family from Hualpén that occupies land that the Serviu needs for the construction of 200 housing solutions. Those affected denounce that the Presidential Delegation acted illegally by ordering the Carabineros to remove them from a site whose property is under dispute before a Civil Court.
Four days after Carabineros personnel arrived at Nueva Imperial street in the René Schneider neighborhood to comply with the eviction order signed by the presidential delegate, Daniela Dresdner, the Concepción Court of Appeals declared Violeta Parra’s protection appeal admissible Pincheira.
But also, the resolution accepts an order not to innovate that paralyzes the measure, allowing the woman and her children to continue living in the place while the legal action sponsored by the lawyer Carlos Gutiérrez Muñoz is processed, who explained that the Delegation acted arbitrarily when ordering the eviction, without considering that their clients and the Serviu are in a lawsuit over ownership of the land.
The eviction was described as violent by Francisca Vivanco, daughter of Violeta Parra, whose house is the only one that was not demolished by the Carabineros, and where everyone is now living.
For the Serviu it is land taken over by the family, which they trust will be accredited before the courts, pointing out the substitute director, Marcelo López, that people occupy it with a more economic sense, since they have a commercial premises there.
With the order to innovate, however, the Serviu will not be able to take possession of the 5,000-square-meter area, let alone carry out the real estate project that includes the construction of 200 houses.