“The number increased significantly and was transversal, from Portuguese to foreigners, from young people to the elderly. This year alone we registered around 25% more, essentially due to the worsening of living conditions, immigration and the increase in drug consumption”, Renata Alves, general director of Comunidade Vida e Paz, told Expresso.
“In Lisbon, you have never seen so many tents. And the phenomenon of homelessness has changed. Before, they were essentially men with mental health or addiction problems. Now the profile is very varied. And there are entire families without a home”, confirms Rita Valadas.
“We should all admit that we failed. Millions of euros are spent and people remain on the street or in a revolving door dependent on charity. There are more than ten thousand homeless people and the PRR doesn't have a penny to give them a home. The only money there is is for emergency and temporary responses. We continue to fail to resolve the problem”, criticises Américo Nave, director of Associação Crescer.
According to Renata Alves, from Comunidade Vida e Paz, the answers that exist are not enough for all the people currently living on the streets. “The centers are full. We have a unit for 40 people that is always full. And the institutions are going through many difficulties due to rising costs, lack of support and falling donations.”
“The situation is very aggressive. The responses were not scaled for a problem of this magnitude”, confirms Rita Valadas.
Last Tuesday, International Day for the Eradication of Poverty, Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa called for new approaches and models of action to combat poverty, claiming that the country cannot accept almost two million poor people.
In the message published on the Presidency's website, the head of State highlights the “positive steps” in identifying the causes, diagnosing the problems and advancing a National Strategy to Combat Poverty published in 2021, with “the ambition to achieve until 2030”, but highlights that “more is needed than isolated measures or support which, without proper monitoring and evaluation, will never be considered strategic”.
“It is, therefore, important that this date serves to reinforce the alert regarding the new realities that have worsened poverty conditions, requiring new approaches and models of action to combat them”, warns the President of the Republic.
What can I say. I read that Portugal gave a new home (plus education and medical care) to over 50.000 Ukrainians, who - it appears - could be accommodated without a serious problem. So I assume that the homelessness issue is just there, because the Portuguese goverment does not care.
Plus, if there are sufficient funds to support Ukraine, why isn't there enough money for shelters in Portugal.
By Tom from Lisbon on 22 Oct 2023, 09:32
This is where Socialism gets you - abject and miserable failure. By demonising landlords, making it harder to evict tenants or charge a fair market rent (govt interferes by limiting rent increases), you discourage landlords, some of whom will withdraw from the market, reducing the supply of rental property. This then disproportionately hits the most vulnerable people, as the remaining landlords, fearing difficulty evicting a bad tenant, will then only want to rent to people with good references and who can easily afford the rent. So Socialism wrecks the lives and opportunities for the most vulnerable, enslaves people into a life of welfare, or confiscates their hard-earned income through excessive taxation. It's troubling that so many voters cannot connect the dots.
By Billy Bissett from Porto on 23 Oct 2023, 11:16
I agree with you Tom 100%..
By Ramzi from Other on 23 Oct 2023, 14:31
Visited Lisboa for a week March 1st renting a room not far from Av da Liberdade where some of the top European fashion houses are and top hotels and was truly shocked to see people using packaging boxes to construct make shift homes or hovels every night. Each morning cleaning crews would drag them away and all the well dressed visitors and locals would just stroll on by not noticing a thing. Very sad image that lived with me as I moved on to Faro and then on to a little place, Armacao da Pera, where nothing of the sort happened. Sadly all major cities are facing the same problem of rising rental prices, miserable wages and lack of sufficient housing. Not only Portugals problem.
By Serafin Schardt from Other on 23 Oct 2023, 16:41
We need to take care of our own homeless problems in our country before we can take in all these refugees from other countries and accomodate them and completely ignore the plight of our own people. That is so wrong! The government needs to wake up and take care of their own people first!
By Lisa from Other on 23 Oct 2023, 18:15
In Lisbon there is a notorious decrease of homeless people, I don't know about the rest of Portugal. This types of news are recycled annually, they are not credible.
By Diogo F. from Lisbon on 23 Oct 2023, 21:05
So many empty convents; some turned into 5 star hotels. Perhaps, use them for assisting homeless. For many, homelessness is just a check away and then loss of a job - no family support- it’s a global reality.
By Michele Silva from Lisbon on 26 Dec 2023, 11:11