A woman from Peru, Yumiko Ramírez, went viral when she demolished her three-story house. She made the drastic decision because her ex-father-in-law ‘expelled’ her from his country.

Footage broadcast on digital platforms shows several men hitting the walls of the building with tangerines.

Yumiko has four children and said her ex-husband “abandoned” her about seven years ago, Diario Correo reports.

From Chancay, where she had her house, the woman said she was demolishing it because she had invested all her parents’ savings in its construction, and her children’s grandfather, Pablo Honorato Vega, through the judiciary to had requested her deportation. “

Owning her own home was her dream, Diario Correo reported, but the entire venture fell apart when it was destroyed by blows.

The journalist showed the rubble piling up on the edge of the former home of the woman and her children.

“They threw me out, but I took the house with me”: Man disappointed in love demolishes the house he built on his ex-in-laws’ land

They are also destroying the company

On the facade of the building, where stones of all shapes and sizes fall, you will see a sign with a restaurant-bar.

The company has the same goal: the bosses reduce it because it is located on the land of their ex-father-in-law, a man who, as captured by the cameras, is attentive to every twist that the men Yumiko sought out for such a painful task.

By losing the ownership dispute, Diario Correo points out, the woman will leave the empty land to her ex-partner’s father.

In the midst of this dispute already known inside and outside Peru, the man who abandoned Yumiko returned and one of his sons – published in El Popular – reprimanded him: “You show up after six years.”

Ricardo Vega wanted to stop the demolition of his house, but his son prevented him from doing so.

Do you live with your in-laws? Think carefully before making a decision

The parties in conflict speak

“Little by little we built the house, I also worked, although the man (ex-father-in-law) says I don’t know how to work. I also have my business (selling food), well, unfortunately that no longer exists,” said Yumiko.

“The man asks me for the land, he wants me to give it to him, but not the building because I did that,” he said.

In La República they said the woman sent audio files in which she claims she “sacrificed for years” to get the house.

The woman told them she had gone to her mother’s house with three of her children, the fourth is in Lima for her studies. Ask for help to work.

Before that medium, Yumiko said that Ricardo Vega, the father of her children, “focused only on the legal process and showed a lack of concern for the minors.”

The former father-in-law, Pablo Vega, told the same media that he gave up the land so his son could live with his partner, “but they broke up.”

He added that the deportation affects the woman, but not her grandchildren.

This viral event also caught the attention of authorities. The Republic indicated that the demolition of the building has been paralyzed by the inspection area of ​​the Municipality of Chancay and the National Police of Peru (PNP). It will dawn and it will be seen. (JO)