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Thursday, September 02, 2010
June 27, 2009

Parisian Nights


by BAGnewsNotes contributer Zoriah Miller

I recently spent some time on the streets of Paris with several groups of homeless refugees from Afghanistan. Stuck in a state of limbo, unable to gain official refugee status and the right to work, unable to make the difficult and illegal crossing to England where they would be able to gain that status and employment, they spend their days and nights on streets trying to survive.

Villemin Square Park in Paris is home to between 150 to 300 Afghan refugees. They store sleeping supplies such as cardboard and blankets in the bushes during the day and at night, after the police have cleared and locked up the park, they enter by sneaking back through a loose fence. They do their best to remain clean, doing laundry and bathing in a park faucet. They sleep through rain and cold temperatures only to be woken up in the morning by the police who clear the park and then re-open it to the public. After coming back they shave in the bushes and all 300 share three overflowing, portable toilets outside of the park, along with the other homeless in the neighborhood.

For now they are stuck. They rely on the Salvation Army for some bread and coffee in the morning and the Red Cross provides a meal service in the evening. A local hospital is tasked with providing them emergency medical care, but one man had been suffering from a headache nearly the entire week I spent with them and each day he was turned away from the hospital.

Unable to work, there is not a lot to do during the days. Some go to Internet cafes and try to find out information about which European Union countries may offer them asylum. Others have taken to drinking, despite their faith. Fights have become common and a recent murder in the park has shown yet another danger these refugees face.They are here for different reasons. One man’s entire family had been killed during an aerial bombing run that destroyed his home. Others left merely to avoid such things and some just wanted a new life or the possibility of a good job. Several that I spoke to had worked as interpreters for the U.S. military in Afghanistan. When the Taliban found out that they were assisting the U.S. troops, they received death threats. The US military responded by offering them permits to carry hand guns—they laughed when they told me this story and one said “What will my little gun do against 20 men with AK-47s and rocket launchers?”So, when left with the choice of fleeing their country and leaving their family behind or facing nearly certain death, the choice is obvious.(images © Zoriah Miller. Captions available by clicking link under slideshow window.)

7 Comments Leave a comment

  • 06/27/2009 11:22pm

    stevelaudig said:

    Is this the “backwash” of Empire that ferments, ripens and finally becomes the blowback of empire?

    Reply to this comment

  • 06/28/2009 12:01am

    Tom Traubert said:

    Those photos are profoundly moving. Just extraordinary.

    Reply to this comment

  • 06/28/2009 06:23am

    raketemannschaften said:

    targeted en oubli ette

    Reply to this comment

  • 06/28/2009 07:41am

    mon_oeil said:

    I find the title of the piece rather odd, of course the point is to contrast the notion of an enjoyable, even romantic night in the city of lights with what the Afghani refugees must go through. But since their plight has more to do with American failures in Afghanistan perhaps the title should point the finger to the appropriate perpetrator in whose country they will have very little chance to seek refuge.

    Reply to this comment

  • 06/28/2009 08:29am

    Tena said:

    Seems to me that the world is ignoring the refugee problem because no one knows what to do about it. Ignoring it obviously will not make it go away and every war that starts in another 3d world country produces thousands of new refugees.
    Aid agencies try to address this problem, but they don’t have the money or the manpower to keep track of all the people on the globe who have been dispossessed of their homes. This is going to be one of the major problems of this century and eventually we’re going to have to deal with it – these people cannot just be turned loose and then lost.
    I don’t have the answer. I don’t think anyone does. *sigh*

    Reply to this comment

  • 06/28/2009 09:22am

    yg said:

    with their plight, that black eye belongs to us. is there nothing we get right? surely our embassy in france can be stirred to do more.
    for people to be reduced like this when they’ve exhibited how bright they are… they have obvious skills that are sorely needed and yet policy makers are either too oblivious or unimaginative enough to harness it. it is so insulting to be offered handouts and to be viewed as a charity case when they have something valuable to offer whose potential is not being realized.
    slide 17 aches with betrayal.

    Reply to this comment

  • 06/28/2009 05:18pm

    pcalvin said:

    A very strong series of images. Ironically, today’s NY Times has a travel piece about “The Frugal Pleasures of Paris in Summer”.

    Reply to this comment

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