Around 50 migrants were removed from a camp in front of Paris City Hall on Wednesday, April 3, 2024. Migrants had moved into the central square two days earlier after their NGO-run housing facility had to close | Photo: picture alliance
Around 50 migrants were removed from a camp in front of Paris City Hall on Wednesday, April 3, 2024. Migrants had moved into the central square two days earlier after their NGO-run housing facility had to close | Photo: picture alliance

Dozens of migrants were removed from a camp in front of the Paris City Hall on Wednesday. Most of them were women and young children. They were moved into temporary housing in eastern France. Some migrant advocates have claimed that moves like this are part of a 'social cleansing' ahead of the Olympics.

Around 50 people -- most of them women and younger children -- were moved from a camp in front of the City Hall of Paris to temporary accommodation in Besançon, a small city some 400 kilometers southeast of the French capital, according to reports from news agency AP.

Police cleared the camp in the early morning hours of Wednesday (April 3) and the migrants boarded buses with their belongings.

The migrants had been sleeping under plastic sheets to protect themselves from the cold and rain, reportedly because authorities had forbidden them from setting up tents in the central square.

Migrant mother hopes that life outside Paris will be better

One of the migrants told AP reporters that she was hoping life would be better for her and her children outside of Paris.

Fatoumata from Guinea said that she and her two children (aged three months and three years) had spent a month sleeping rough in the French capital. "It’s no way to live, it’s exhausting," she said. "They told us we are going to the provinces, which is better than sleeping outside with the children."

Like Fatoumata, many of the unhoused migrants in Paris are from French-speaking African countries like Burkina Faso, Guinea, Ivory Coast and Senegal. But there are also many Afghans among the hundreds of migrants sleeping rough in makeshift camps in the French capital. Some are undocumented or have had their asylum claims rejected, but there are also asylum seekers and people with international protection who have struggled to find housing or who have not gotten a spot in official reception centers.

Migrants participated in a protest against the housing crisis in Paris on April 1, 2024. Authorities have started moving unhoused people – including many migrants – from emergency accommodation like cheap hotels in Paris to other regions of France. The goal is to make room for the large number of tourists expected in the city during the summer Olympics, a controversial policy enacted by the French government | Photo: picture alliance
Migrants participated in a protest against the housing crisis in Paris on April 1, 2024. Authorities have started moving unhoused people – including many migrants – from emergency accommodation like cheap hotels in Paris to other regions of France. The goal is to make room for the large number of tourists expected in the city during the summer Olympics, a controversial policy enacted by the French government | Photo: picture alliance



Hundreds of homeless migrants in Paris

Many of the unhoused migrants in Paris are young people. Migrants and rights organizations say that many unaccompanied teenagers are falsely considered adults by the authorities, meaning they do not get access to the services and rights unaccompanied migrants under 18 are entitled to, including housing.

Unhoused migrants have set up camp in front of the Paris City Hall several times over the past few years to demand accommodation. This time, people had moved into the central square on Monday evening (April 1). "The aim of this occupation is, as usual, to make visible the situation of these people," Nikolai Posner, coordinator of Utopia 56, an organization that supports unhoused migrants in Paris, told InfoMigrants earlier this week.

NGOs claim: 'Social cleansing' ahead of Paris Olympics

The housing situation for migrants and refugees in Paris has long been controversial, but the debate surrounding the issue has become more heated ahead of the Olympics, which will be held in the city in July and August.

Migrants and some left-leaning advocacy organizations have accused the authorities of carrying out 'social cleansings' in their attempts to push poor and homeless people, including migrants, out of the city.

Meanwhile, some French political officials from outside of Paris – many of them from right-wing parties – have criticized the relocation of migrants from the capital to their region. However, some migrants and officials believe that relocations from the expensive capital to more rural regions could ultimately benefit migrants, as they may be more likely to find accommodation and work opportunities in these less-saturated areas.

With AP