My tenant owes £15,000 in rent, but I can't get them out of the property
She moved in with her children and rented out her south London maisonette.
But last year, her tenant stopped paying rent.
Rongmala, 57, eventually sent an eviction notice and began court proceedings, but several months later the tenant is around £15,000 in rent arrears and refusing to leave.
Court delays are holding up the removal of the tenant, leaving Rongmala feeling "broken".
Some landlords are worried delays like this could become worse under the government's new Renters' Rights Act, which comes into force on 1 May in England.
Rongmala says financial problems resulting from her lost rental income are causing her depression.
"My children are helping me for everything, but I don't want that," she says.
The family has been told this could take up to 11 months.
But dozens of renters have told the BBC about significant difficulties they face, too.
She felt she was "at the mercy of the landlord changing their mind".
But landlords say they fear the system will make it harder to remove problematic tenants.
According to figures from the Ministry of Justice, private landlords currently wait 26 weeks - a median figure - between bringing a claim and being able to repossess a property. Ten years ago, it was approximately 16 weeks.
They said the Act would give tenants "much needed and long overdue" security in their homes.
'Ever-increasing regulation' Former engineer Keith Taylor, who rents out three properties, is convinced the Act will make life much harder for people like him.
Rongmala and Marouf say they "don't want tenants to have to struggle".
But they say small or accidental landlords like her "are facing issues as well" and the government should be trying to help, rather than "making things harder"
Logic Quality Breakdown:
- Updated_At:
- Truth_Blocks:
- Analysis_Method: