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Paris wants the Olympics to shine. Where does that leave its homeless people?

Olympic host cities have typically found it hard to make real change when it comes to homelessness. Though the Games provide an opportunity for the host to show off its prosperity and modernity, they also reveal to the world its ability to tackle complicated social issues.

In two weeks, it will be Paris’s turn.

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With the Paris Olympics set to start soon, the city’s homeless people are being shunted out of sight. Will Paris break the Olympic tradition of failing to improve the lot of the host city’s most vulnerable residents?

Ahead of the Paris Games, the organizing committee signed a charter of social commitments. The city also poured millions into creating an Olympic Village that is intended to provide housing to the local community post-Games.

The challenge has been how to find housing for the swell of migrants in recent years, and how to remove tent camps in a humane manner. The city has also struggled to handle the growing number of people who use crack, of which 1 in 4 are estimated to be homeless or living precariously.

With all the money being spent on the Olympics, there is little excuse not to make at least some progress, experts say.

“Cities need to ask themselves,” says sociologist Jacqueline Kennelly, “if this much public money is going to the Olympics, why is there no accountability as to whether the legacy commitments have been met?”

When Alseny left Guinea for a better life in Paris, he never thought he’d end up living on the street. But this spring, victim of a constellation of circumstances, he found himself sleeping under the Pont Marie bridge, along a stretch of the Seine frequented by tourists for its views of the Eiffel Tower.

Then on March 6, police came to remove Alseny and 400 other migrants, busing them to a nearby gymnasium. That’s when he got wind that Paris authorities were planning to send them to one of 10 new temporary shelters in rural France ahead of this summer’s Olympic Games. It was tempting but also a risk: If he left Paris, he’d have to start his request for residency as a minor all over again. (Alseny chose not to share his last name.)

Frustrated by their plight, Alseny and 150 underage migrants took over a Paris cultural center. “The city says they don’t want to see tents and homeless people on the streets during the Olympics, but we’re not delinquents,” Alseny says. “They want to send us away to clean up Paris, but what will we do in the countryside? It’s not a solution.”

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

With the Paris Olympics set to start soon, the city’s homeless people are being shunted out of sight. Will Paris break the Olympic tradition of failing to improve the lot of the host city’s most vulnerable residents?

City Hall says that the March evictions were prompted by a risk of flooding along the Seine, and that the shelters have been created to take the pressure off the capital. But for several months French nonprofits have denounced what they call a marked increase in evictions of those experiencing homelessness and a “sanitization” of the city ahead of the Games.

Olympic host cities have, in the past, typically found it hard to make a noticeable and lasting difference when it comes to homelessness. Though the Games provide an opportunity for the host city to show off its prosperity and modernity, they also reveal to the world its ability to tackle complicated social issues. And in two weeks, it will be Paris’s turn.

“The Olympics create a window onto a city and it’s all about giving a positive image, which does not include people living on the street,” says Thibaut Besozzi, a sociologist at the Regional Institute of Social Work in the Lorraine region who specializes in homelessness. “But you can’t just send people away and expect the issue [of homelessness] to go away. The question isn’t necessarily what we do with homeless people. It’s how we do things.”

Colette Davidson

Around 150 migrants occupied the Maison des Métallos cultural venue in Paris on April 6, in protest against the city’s attempt to evict them from tent camps and send them out of the city ahead of the Olympic Games.

Aspirations vs. realities

When Athens held the first modern Olympic Games in 1896, the event was all about sports. But increasingly, it focuses on city marketing and legacy, say observers.

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