Verse that is then reblogged and retweeted by thousands of followers who see themselves reflected in the posts. Young poets are on Tumblr and Twitter, composing affecting and funny verse as short as a hundred and forty characters and also stretching much longer. They also may not be looking in the right places. The state is obliged and able to provide this care but is choosing not to, as seen in many countries across the continent today - the hostile face of Europe.It’s a rare poet who can write movingly about African migration to Europe and also tweet humorously about the VH1 reality show “Love & Hip-Hop: Atlanta.” Every generation of writers and readers has mourned the shrinking place of poetry in our lives, and they may not be wrong. Most of the support for refugees living in the Paris still comes from grassroots organisations and NGOs including food, clothing, medical aid and social and legal help. No amount of hostility or aggression will stop people seeking safety as it cannot be worse than what they are running from. This never-ending cycle of displacement achieves nothing but to cause even more mental and physical damage to the refugee population here and does not prevent new people from arriving, as to be a refugee is not a choice. For those housed in accommodation centres this shelter is temporary at best and could be withdrawn at any time. ![]() This means people who are not housed are now less visible for help to find them. Since 2021 state-run accommodation centres have finally been expanded providing shelter to most refugees in Paris however some refugees are still excluded and so forced to live in smaller, more vulnerable street camps and hidden squats. The housing given following evacuations would tend to last a few days before many people were told to leave and found themselves back on the street without any materials for shelter or the safety in numbers that the old camp provided. ![]() As the camps have reappeared less and less due to the government finally providing longer term shelter for people these evacuations have become smaller operations but they still are performed regularly on any smaller camps that do settle. The state also performs random evacuations of the camps which typically involves clearing the area by police force in the early hours of the morning, destroying all tents and living structures and sometimes temporarily housing refugees in sports halls and centres across France, sometimes not. Because of this, the camps are unsanitary and exposed leaving refugees at risk of disease and vulnerable to violence from the public and the police – the after-effects of which we would see regularly in our clinic. ![]() The government does not take responsibility for these street camps, only sometimes providing minimal sanitation facilities - portable toilets and outside taps which were never enough for the camp sizes – and only after significant pressure from NGOs and grassroots refugee support organisations. “No one leaves home unless home is the mouth of a shark” Warsan Shire, Home This EU law, the Dublin Regulation, means lots of these people cannot access government help in France for up to 18 months, leaving them homeless with no social support and limited access to healthcare. On the other hand, many of the refugees awaiting an asylum decision in France have had asylum claims rejected elsewhere in Europe and are therefore “Dublin”. Up to 20% of these people already have asylum in France but as there are very limited provisions for refugees at this point they are stuck living in the camps without financial or housing support. The Paris Refugee Camps are unofficial settlements which at points are home to up to 4000 families, unaccompanied children, women and men living in tents and makeshift shacks with limited access to healthcare. Since the destruction of the Calais Jungle in October 2016 the 10,000 refugees who lived there were forcibly dispersed across France and nearby countries, thousands of whom made their way to Paris. As stated by the UNHCR, there are even more refugees and displaced people worldwide today than at the initial peak of the European Refugee Crisis in 2015. ![]() And since the closure of the Calais Jungle in 2016 many people are under the false impression that there are no longer refugee camps in Europe. Most people have heard of the Calais Jungle due to the huge and overwhelmingly negative coverage by European media however other places in France such as Paris and Dunkirk are not talked about on such a scale. The Paris Refugee Crisis is one of the least known refugee communities in Europe.
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