Going flat out to share flats
BY SHALINI SETH (SPECIAL REPORT)/Khaleej Times 

1 May 2005 

DUBAI� �Wanted a Goan, Mangalorean, vegetarian, Hindu, non-smoking bachelor.� 
You could be forgiven for thinking that this is a matrimonial classified, 
listing ideal qualifications for a groom. The fact is, it is about sharing, 
but only a flat, with kitchen and separate bath thrown in if you are lucky. 

Sharing a house, between two families, a few singles, one single and a family 
is all the norm today, where rents are rising rather disproportionately in 
comparison with the paying capacity.

What is aggravating the rise is the fact that people are augmenting their 
income by letting out one or two rooms from their company or rental 
accommodation.

Until recently, landlords did not increase rent during the first two years of 
a tenant�s occupancy, and only 10-15 per cent annually after that. But now it 
is common for landlords to increase rents by as much as 60-70 per cent before 
the end of the first year�s contract.

�Rents have gone from Dh33,000 last year to 60,000 this year. You tell me if 
that is fair!� asks Shahzaad Mehta, a resident of Dubai for the last 23 years 
who is finding herself unable to cope with the rent rise and maintain her 
standard of living.

�I share my house, kitchen and all facilities so I can afford it,� Mehta says. 

Her requirements are simple. �The room with  the attached bath is yours. We 
never step in. You can use the kitchen and all our utensils. But no late night 
guests and definitely no visitors, of either sex who stay over.� In turn she 
tells you that she smokes, has a male visitor who leaves by 9.30pm and that 
she does not like to cook. �You should know all this if you want to share a 
house,� she clarifies. 

She plans to charge Dh2,000 for the single room with attached bath and use of 
kitchen in Bur Dubai area. If you go directly to the landlord it is possible 
to get a studio in that much money even today. But reports indicate that 
people often rent larger houses to supplement their income.

There are cases of expats who have rented a three bedroom apartment, put in an 
ad in the classified and rented out two rooms at a premium. In the end, they 
end up paying no rent themselves and in fact, making some money.   �We have 
company accommodation of two bedrooms and we are only likely to use one, so we 
are renting out the other,� says an expat who has advertised to charge Dh2,500 
for a room in the old Pakistani Consulate area. 

Sharing between equals creates its own permutations and combinations. Says 
Wong Wing, a single Malaysian who is sharing a house with an Indian single 
woman after getting fed up of exploitative rates and rules, �I could not 
imagine living in a boys� hostel-like space some 10 years after my graduation 
and in any case, I would rather share rent equally than fund someone�s rent.

So when this common friend told me that an Indian girl is looking for a room, 
I jumped at the offer. I have the lease and I share the amount equally with 
her. We both mind our own business and live happily.� But in this case, not 
ever after. 

Matchmaking is still stringent. A look at the classifieds will tell you: 
Indian ladies preferably with afternoon and night shifts; decent Tamilian 
family; Europeans preferred; decent English speaking bachelor; non-cooking 
South Indian spinster only; Keralite couple on a visit visa; Filipino families 
only.

Says Sarmad Khan, a Pakistani media executive who is looking for a place in 
Dubai or Sharjah after being unceremoniously evicted from his previous 
one, �The discrimination is unbelievable. They are so specific about the kind 
of person they want to share the house with, that my chances are almost nil.�

>From the legal angle however, there is no anti-discrimination, all men and 
women are equal under the law that operates in this part of the world. So you 
can advertise to share a house with someone who likes to eat what you do and 
has similar tastes in computer games as well. Is sharing allowed?

For many, sharing accommodation is a genuine sharing of expenses. Families 
even cook together. Sometimes companies offer shared accommodation for a few 
years before providing independent housing.

Says Hetal Jain, an expat who together with her husband shared a two bedroom 
apartment with another family for a year.

�It was like living back home in a joint family and that experience actually 
helped us cope.� 

Sharing also creates special kind of kitchen mates. Indeed if sharing a 
kitchen means eating the same food, it could be a problem if your religion or 
community bans certain foods. It is possible that you would be asked to cook 
non-veg food only when the wife is not there, and share it with the husband! 
And you adjust in various ways.

Says Jayant Jain, Hetal�s husband who lived in the house with the family for 
six months after she had gone home, �Till both our wives were there, they did 
all the cooking and shopping together. But if there is a stag and a couple 
then the stag has to pitch in washing dishes or buying grocery. And I did 
that.�

Funny, when you wouldn�t help your wife in the kitchen, you would willingly 
adjust to helping someone else�s! � With inputs from Lana Mahdi in Al Ain, 
Lina Abdul Rahman in Sharjah  and Zaigham Ali in Dubai.
DIFFERENT VIEWS ON SHARING
DUBAI/SHARJAH/AL AIN � According to Dubai Municipality, sharing is not a 
problem as long as the tenant�s intention is not commercial.

The municipality will step in to prevent overcrowding and unhygienic living 
conditions.

There have been instances of 20 bachelors crammed in a three-bedroom villa or 
five families staying in a similar space in which case the other residents in 
the neighbourhood might complain.

Also if someone has leased 2-3 or more apartments and is sub-leasing them to 
different people for a profit and the landlord complains, the sub-leases would 
be evicted after a two, three-day notice.

But as far sharing between two families or consenting adults is concerned, it 
is not an issue. 

Sharjah Municipality however, frowns upon bachelors occupying a villa, though 
they have no issues with people sharing accommodation in apartments. But often 
since these arrangements are by word of mouth, protected by a month�s rent, 
there is no legal contract.

Mohammed Ahmed Al Harthy, Head of Rents Department at Al Ain Municipality, has 
announced that people who make subleasing contracts will have to face lawsuits 
by house owners.

UP, UP AND AWAY!

DUBAI �According to a survey by Gulftalent.com. rents this year were on 
average 26 per cent higher than the previous year, whereas average salaries 
had only risen by 1.5 per cent in the same period.

Dubai had the highest average rent increase at 27per cent, followed by Sharjah 
with 25 per cent and Abu Dhabi in third place with 23 per cent.

Nationwide, rents for apartments went up by around 24 per cent, while room 
rents shot up at the rate of 31 per cent.

- Forwarded by http://www.goa-world.com

MAY BALL 2005
Date: 12-05-05    Organized by Goan Welfare Society (GWS)-Kuwait
Venue: Safir Palace Hotel, Riggea   Band: Stepping Stones  
Highlights: Crowning of the MAY QUEEN 2005.

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