At first glance, this is very
much a town on the up - a place where newly wealthy citizens pour their riches
into gaudy, Beverly Hills-style homes, proud to show off just what they have
achieved.
But the brightly-coloured
streets hide a much darker secret: this is a town allegedly built on British
benefits, where law-abiding locals fear their neighbours return.
Welcome to Tandarei, a town
where many houses were built on the back of Britain's generous benefits system
- and the ability of the criminal underclass to manipulate it.
Tandarei, some 100 miles east
of the Romanian capital Bucharest, has changed beyond recognition in recent
years: the number of mansions in this 12,000-strong town has tripled since it
first attracted international attention.
HOW DO THE LAVISH MANSION OWNERS EXPLOIT THE SYSTEM?
It is thought that those
living in the extravagant mansions in Tandarei have exploited the British
benefits system to send money back to their home country.
Neighbours say the homeowners
spend most of their time living in the UK, only returning to Romania for
holidays and special occasions.
In Britain, despite tightening
rules on benefits that can be claimed by migrants, employed workers still have
access to the benefits system.
Claiming child benefits, for
example, means a family with three children would be able to claim more than
£2,500 a year.
In a country where the average
annual salary is just over £4,000, that money can go a long way.
Of those, more than 300 - most
with gleaming BMWs and brand new Volkswagens parked on the expertly-paved
driveways outside - are feared to have been paid for by the British taxpayer
through money earned illegally or through benefits scams in the UK.
Some, with balconies protruding
from every bedroom, are thought to belong to Gypsy gangsters who flout Europe's
free movement rules to fleece Britons out of tens of thousands of pounds.
Many of the cars parked
outside the houses have British number plates. Critics have held this up as
evidence that Romanian gypsies travelled to the UK to claim benefits and sent
the money to their relatives back home, where the average annual salary is
around £4,100.
More than 3,000 Romanians were
found to be claiming benefits in the UK as of February, government
statistics revealed.
The rules may have been
tightened in recent years - rules that stipulate an EU migrant who is
unemployed have to be in the country for three months before they can claim JSA
for a total of three months, and they cannot claim housing benefits - but many
still find a way around them.
For example, those who arrive
as an employed worker have a different classification under EU rules. That
means they have the same access to the benefits system that any UK national has
- which means £20.70 a week for your oldest child, and an additional £13.70 a
week for all other children.
Over a year, it means a family
with three children would be able to claim more than £2,500 - more than half
the country's average salary.
Added to other possible
benefits - and the odd undeclared, untaxed job on the side - it is not hard to
see how Romania's criminal underbelly manage to fund such lifestyles in their
home country.
For the hardworking citizens
of this eastern European country, it is more than a little galling.
Tandarei local Alecu Vasile,
60, told MailOnline: 'I don't think one can make such houses with honest
money... I am barely making ends meet.'
However, that is not to say the locals of this small town want their gypsy neighbours to return any time soon. In fact, they live in constant fear of them returning from the UK, where some 5,000 local gypsies are thought to have settled in recent years.
Tandarei locals talk of being
under siege, saying peace only returns to the area when the gypsies are out of
the country. When they come back for public holidays and special occasions
including Orthodox Cross Day, chaos reigns.
One local said: 'I am glad
they are abroad. When they come back I don't go out after dark, and I don't
visit the annual fair here anymore. It's just too dangerous and I would end up
returning without my wallet.
'When they come back, they
want all their families around them. And the family is always bigger. There is
a joke here - three gypsies went to the UK, and 10 came back.
'They want big families,
gypsies have always had large families but now they are really cashing in with
the kids. All of them know about getting benefits abroad, they give each other
advice on how to do it. This is where they get their cash.'
Another neighbour further down
the same street said: 'I lost my son after he got into a fight with the
gypsy. He was killed. I never really got much detail from the police,
other than the fact that it was a gypsy.
'We have more gypsies here
than anywhere else, about three quarters the people living in this town are
gypsies now. Soon there will not be any Romanians left here.'
Even when the gypsies are in
town, it isn't like the homes are full of life: locals say the houses are built
to be shown off rather than be lived in.
The gypsies only use the main
building for family parties and functions but stay in the primitive annexes
built at the back of the lavish properties, they told MailOnline.
'They are too badly built, I
think they are scared to live in them,' said one neighbour, who chose to stay
anonymous for fear of reprisal.
Another said: 'They leave some
family members behind and tell them not to use the house - and only open up
when the rest come back.'
But, the neighbours claim,
they aren't keeping house for their better-off relatives in that time.
'They are lazy, they even hire
Romanians to do the work on their houses because they can't be bothered even
when they are home,' one person told MailOnline.
As a result, many Romanians in
town end up working for their gypsy neighbours as caretakers - keeping the
houses clean and gardens well maintained while they are abroad.
Two of the lavish houses
belong to a Roma gypsy gang known as the Radu clan.
The garish, orange home has
been deserted since they were arrested in the UK five years ago.
Adrian Radu, 33, the son of
one of the gang leaders, Constantin Radu, illegally claimed £29,000 in income
support and tax credits from the UK between 2008 to 2010, when he was in
Romania.
When police arrested him in
Tandarei he was living in a new marble-floored, six-bedroom mansion and driving
an expensive Audi Q7 car.
The driveway now lies empty
and from the gates outside hangs a sign announcing the owners are living
abroad.
There have been other
instances of his compatriots being punished for illegally claiming benefits in
the UK. Romanian gypsy Ilie Schian was sentenced to three years behind bars for
defrauding the British taxpayer of 114,000 in benefits.
Schian, who was jailed in
2010, created a false identity to claim the money which he spent on sports cars
and a nine bedroom home in his home country.
'I heard they got some
benefits in the UK for having a lot of children,' said a neighbour who refused
to disclose her name.
She added: 'Roger [one of the
Radu clan] has eight children. I don't know when they have time to make some
many children.'
She said Dudu and Roger, both
from the same gang, have luxurious objects inside the houses which they only
open on holidays, adding: 'Last year, Dudu changed all of his furniture. But
the three houses across the road that belong to his cousins are empty.'
In many ways, Tandarei has not
changed for decades. There are still the communist housing blocks built by
Nicolae Ceausescu, the country’s last Communist leader who bulldozed villages
to force people into urban areas.
But the rapid influx of wealth
gypsy families has put pressure on local communities who said they are often
approached about selling their homes.
One woman said: 'I have heard
that in other areas people were really put under pressure, and things got quite
nasty.
'I get asked a couple of times
a year, they are always friendly and polite, and I can't say they are
intimidating. But they are really keen to have their families nearby and want
to buy up the land.'
They now fear that if the UK
votes to leave Europe, the gypsies will return to Romania en masse - making
their lives a living hell.
SAISI!
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