The Borneo Post

Homeless taste ‘luxury’ at Geneva hotel

- Nina Larson

GENEVA: Sofiane Rahmani can hardly believe his luck. After several years of living on the street and bouncing between shelters, he now has his own hotel room, personal bathroom and all meals provided.

“It’s true luxury,” the 16-year-old Algerian illegal migrant told AFP at the three-star Bel Esperance Hotel in Geneva.

Last month, as the hotel faced a cascade of cancellati­ons, it decided to turn over the entire establishm­ent to house homeless women and youths and help get them off the streets during the Covid-19 pandemic.

At the hotel in the heart of Geneva’s Old City, 20 rooms have been provided to homeless women, while 11 have been given to unaccompan­ied minors like Rahmani who have no access to seeking asylum in Switzerlan­d.

“It happened fairly naturally,” hotel director Alain Meuwly told AFP, sitting in the breakfast room, where tables have been spaced far apart and equipped with only one chair each.

When Switzerlan­d began cancelling all public events and closing restaurant­s and shops to halt the spread of the virus in early March, “more than 90 per cent of our bookings were cancelled,” he said.

The hotel, a profit-driven business run by the Salvation Army, was empty.

At the same time colleagues within the Christian charity told him they were looking for safe ways to house some of the estimated 1,000 homeless people in Geneva.

Good for business Switzerlan­d, which to date has reported nearly 28,000 confirmed Covid-19 cases and more than 1,100 deaths, does not have a national policy against homelessne­ss, with each of the confederat­ion’s 26 cantons implementi­ng their own approaches.

In Geneva, the Salvation Army and other organisati­ons have long provided emergency overnight shelters with a few dozen beds, but never before anything with 24-hour service.

Meuwly said the transforma­tion process was quite simple.

The hotel’s regular staff were all placed on temporary unemployme­nt, and a team of social workers were brought in to accommodat­e the new residents, who will be allowed to stay until June 1.

The dining area was spaced out, masks and disinfecta­nt were provided and only one person was permitted per room.

“Since this is a slightly different clientele we removed some gadgets that you would usually find in a three-star hotel room, like tablets and coffee-makers,” Meuwly acknowledg­ed, stressing that the “comfort level is the same.”

“There are the same beds and bedding, TVs, and especially wifi. That is something everyone really seems to appreciate.”

Ironically, the building served for more than 60 years as a shelter for vulnerable women, but in 1996 it was transforme­d into a hotel, which today offers elegant, plush rooms that during the high season can go for up to 600 Swiss francs ($620, 570 euros) a night.

Meuwly said he was not worried that housing the homeless might harm business once the crisis ends.

“Not at all,” he said, adding that he had received numerous messages from regular customers congratula­ting him for the initiative and asking how they could help.

“I think it could even be an asset to the business.”

‘Total comfort’

Rahmani is certainly happy with the arrangemen­t.

After making a treacherou­s boat crossing from Algeria to Spain three years ago, making his way to the streets of Paris, and finally to Geneva last month, he said hotel life was “total comfort.”

“We don’t have to think about food, we don’t have to worry where to sleep, or if we will be cold,” he said.

“I’d like to stay here forever.” Geneva provides migrants who are unaccompan­ied minors with special provisions, often officially registerin­g them with organisati­ons and giving access to food and shelter.

Hafida Marsli, a 42-year-old woman who made her way from Morocco to Switzerlan­d a decade ago in search of a better life only to eventually find herself homeless in Geneva, agreed.

“It is really good here,” she told AFP, adjusting her headscarf. “It’s all good.”

Valerie Spagna, who heads the Salvation Army’s night shelter programme for the homeless in Geneva, said there was a world of difference from the regular shelters, where people can enter in the evening to sleep in large dormitorie­s or shared rooms, and have to leave early in the morning.

At the hotel, “they can finally relax, take care of themselves, sleep as long as they want,” she told AFP. “They have finally gotten a small taste of a more normal life.”

She said what she feared most now was “the return to reality” once the homeless residents are asked to leave on June 1.

“They are going to have to go back to real life at some point,” she said.

“It is going to hurt.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Unaccompan­ied minor migrants (from left) Marouen, Sofiane, Younes and Elaa-Eddin pose at the entrance of the threestar Bel Esperance Hotel in Geneva amid the Covid-19 pandemic, caused by the novel coronaviru­s.
Unaccompan­ied minor migrants (from left) Marouen, Sofiane, Younes and Elaa-Eddin pose at the entrance of the threestar Bel Esperance Hotel in Geneva amid the Covid-19 pandemic, caused by the novel coronaviru­s.
 ??  ?? The building of the the Salvation Army in Geneva hosting the three-star Bel Esperance Hotel in Geneva amid the Covid-19 pandemic.
The building of the the Salvation Army in Geneva hosting the three-star Bel Esperance Hotel in Geneva amid the Covid-19 pandemic.
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 ?? — AFP photos ?? Marsli who made her way from Morocco to Switzerlan­d a decade ago in search of a better life only to eventually find herself homeless poses at the three-star Bel Esperance Hotel in Geneva amid the Covid-19 outbreak, caused by the novel coronaviru­s.
— AFP photos Marsli who made her way from Morocco to Switzerlan­d a decade ago in search of a better life only to eventually find herself homeless poses at the three-star Bel Esperance Hotel in Geneva amid the Covid-19 outbreak, caused by the novel coronaviru­s.
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