A disturbing new study from UNICEF France reveals that approximately 2,000 children are compelled to sleep on the streets in Paris, a problem exacerbated by the inadequacy or unavailability of emergency accommodations.
The report calls attention to an alarming increase in these figures over the past year, advocating for an urgent shift in policy from “the street to housing,” particularly in emergency and long-term scenarios. The study points out that compared to last year, the number of children without homes has risen by 20%, a figure that’s two and a half times what it was 18 months ago.
Furthermore, on the night of August 21-22 alone, emergency services were unable to meet the needs of 3,735 individuals who called the homeless emergency hotline, 115, in France. Of these callers, 1,990 were children, 480 of whom were under the age of three. Adding to the severity of the situation, about 80% of these children had already slept on the streets the previous day, illustrating a persistent, deep-rooted issue that demands immediate attention.
This alarming statistic is a spotlight on a broader issue of homelessness and housing insecurity in France, a country that has struggled with providing adequate shelter for its marginalized populations. The housing crisis has worsened amid economic downturns and the COVID-19 pandemic, pushing more families to the brink of homelessness. It poses not just a humanitarian issue but a severe challenge to France’s social welfare system, which prides itself on inclusivity and support for those in need. The lack of emergency housing, in particular, has become a political hot button, fueling debates and raising questions about the country’s commitment to its most vulnerable citizens.