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Ahead of 2024 Olympics, Paris police accused of ‘social cleansing’

- Tom Schad

French police oversaw the eviction of hundreds of migrants and homeless people from an abandoned building in a suburb of Paris on Wednesday, the latest move in what one local charity has called “a social cleansing” ahead of the Summer Olympics.

French news outlets reported Wednesday that roughly 300 migrants were ushered out of an old office building in Vitry-sur-Seine, a southern suburb of Paris, and onto buses that would transport them to other cities in France. The group was majority male, according to Agence France-Presse, though there were also several young mothers with children.

The eviction came exactly 100 days ahead of the start of the Paris Games, which run from July 26 to August 11.

Utopia 56, a nonprofit that supports displaced and homeless people in France, is among several organizati­ons in Paris that have monitored and criticized the evictions – which, according to news reports, have been ongoing for months.

“Utopia 56 observes a clear increase in expulsions from camps where exiled people survive, which systematic­ally give rise to regional movements, without a lasting accommodat­ion solution for some of them,” the organizati­on said in a release in February. “The people affected by the social cleansing provisions are numerous, the need for access to social services and support is constant. If Paris wants to be magnificen­t this summer, this cannot be done to the detriment of the most precarious.”

A spokespers­on for Paris 2024 told USA TODAY Sports in an email that the organizing committee takes issues of homelessne­ss and emergency social care “very seriously and with a lot of humility” and is working with relevant government entities.

“The pressure on emergency housing capacity in the Paris region is unfortunat­ely not new and has been increasing independen­tly of the Games context,” Paris 2024 said. “The Housing Ministry has reminded everyone that the temporary programme of emergency accommodat­ion currently being implemente­d outside the Paris region has nothing to do with the Games.”

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee did not immediatel­y reply to a request for comment.

The Olympic and Paralympic Games are not just a massive, weeks-long sporting event, but also an opportunit­y for host cities like Paris to bask in a near-unpreceden­ted global spotlight. And hosts have historical­ly gone to great lengths to clean up their image before hosting the Games, from building shiny new facilities or revamping public transit networks to relocating poor and homeless people near venues.

Ahead of the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, thousands of homeless people were moved to the outskirts of the city from more touristy parts of downtown, according to news reports at the time. In a 2007 academic report on relocation efforts ahead of the Games, the Swissbased Centre on Housing Rights and Evictions reported that more than 1.25 million people in China were displaced as part of urban redevelopm­ent efforts ahead of the 2008 Olympics, while 720,000 people were evicted in the lead-up to the 1988 Seoul Games.

 ?? LAYLI FOROUDI/REUTERS ?? Families wait with their suitcases after being evicted from a squat in a disused industrial building not far from the Paris 2024 Olympic Athletes Village in Ile-Saint-Denis, near Paris.
LAYLI FOROUDI/REUTERS Families wait with their suitcases after being evicted from a squat in a disused industrial building not far from the Paris 2024 Olympic Athletes Village in Ile-Saint-Denis, near Paris.

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