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SPAIN/
RTR3A0I8 
November 05, 2012 
A pin showing fairy tale characters is seen on the ground next to the remains of the Gabarri-Echevarria... 
Madrid, Spain 
A pin showing fairy tale characters is seen on the ground next to the remains of the Gabarri-Echevarria... 
A pin showing fairy tale characters is seen on the ground next to the remains of the Gabarri-Echevarria home hours after its demolition at the Spanish gypsy settlement of Puerta de Hierro in the outskirts of Madrid July 17, 2012. Antonio Gabarri and his wife Milagros Echevarria are one of the 54 families that live in Puerta de Hierro since the 1960s.The dwellers are registered with the town hall and have access to public services, but for the past two years they have been subject to evictions under Madrid's town planning board orders, on the grounds that the dwellings are illegal. Some of the eldest members of the community, the ones that had been living at Puerta de Hierro longest, like Antonio and Milagros, have been entitled to relocation in social rent flats in the city, but often their children and grand-children have been denied the same right, leaving them homeless. The relatives whose houses are still standing take them in while the debris keeps piling up around them as more demolitions take place. Antonio and Milagros had to take in all their children, their spouses and grand-children when their homes got demolished in 2011. When theirs met the same in July 17, 2012 they had to resort to sleeping in their vans next to the remains of their former home. In September of 2012 Antonio and Milagros were relocated to a rental flat, but their children weren't granted any other housing alternatives. Picture taken July 17, 2012. REUTERS/Susana Vera (SPAIN - Tags: SOCIETY) 
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