logo
Promises made in Paris Olympics run-up broken, say undocumented workers

Promises made in Paris Olympics run-up broken, say undocumented workers

Al Jazeera18-04-2025
Names marked with an asterisk have been changed to protect identities.
Paris, France – When Moussa*, an undocumented construction worker, joined a wildcat strike at the building site of Paris's Adidas Arena in the early hours of October 17, 2023, he was hoping the protest might lead to him getting the papers he needed to travel home to Mali.
Since arriving in France in 2019, having first boarded a boat from Algeria to Spain, Moussa, 25, has not taken a single vacation. After his grandparents died during his time away, he felt an urge to return and mourn with his family.
For eight months, he worked at the arena, which has 8,000 seats and was being prepared for the 2024 Summer Olympics. More than 400 construction workers operated at the site.
He was compensated with normal pay slips by using someone else's papers – a common strategy among undocumented workers. He was paid about 75 euros ($85) a day for gruelling 10-hour shifts at the arena – a rate, he said, that did not include transport expenses, masks or other protective gear.
Moussa's bid paid off.
The workers occupied the site before dawn, blocked it off, and then negotiated all day. By the evening, they had a deal.
After intense discussions between Moussa's employer, the city of Paris, the workers and their union, a list of 14 undocumented individuals who worked at the site was handed over to the French police prefecture, which deals with visa requests, in order for their paperwork to be processed.
They signed a framework agreement that would lead to a residency permit and health insurance. It was signed by the city of Paris, the construction company Bouygues, and several subcontractors.
But 18 months later, the dossiers have still not been approved. Only one of the 14 has been given an appointment at the Paris prefecture.
A number of the undocumented workers are beginning to wonder whether the delays are by design.
'We didn't ask for much, just a residency permit and health insurance card. It's our right. To this day we don't have the right to work in this country,' Moussa said.
Three of the 14 workers and Rafika Rahmani, a lawyer for the CNT-SO union who focuses on the rights of expatriates, told Al Jazeera that they submitted all the information requested of them more than a year ago.
'We have payslips, we have everything. We're playing by the rules. But so far, we haven't had even a single summons,' said Adama*, one of the builders. 'We have no idea why the files are taking so long. We've resubmitted them twice.
'It's like being in prison in France,' added Adama, who has also struggled to find comfortable housing. He sleeps in a room with 11 other people in the eastern suburb of Montreuil. 'It's like if you don't have papers in this county, you don't have any value.'
Despite these challenges and his long shifts in construction work, Adama takes evening classes to learn French.
In January 2025, CNT-SO, which represents construction and cleaning workers, collectively resubmitted 13 dossiers to the Paris prefecture.
'The files are still blocked, despite the fact that I've re-applied for these 13 people,' Rahmani told Al Jazeera.
She suspects that the lack of response is a form of backlash, as the strikes unveiled poor working conditions in France in the lead-up to the Olympics.
'It's revenge,' Rahmani said. 'For them, the [striking workers] gave [France] a bad image, even if it's the reality.'
The project developer and two subcontracting companies – which have not responded to Al Jazeera's request for comment – have allegedly prevented some workers from returning to construction sites, meaning they have lost jobs and housing.
According to Adama, at least three colleagues have not worked since October 2023, and rely on charities to subsidise their food and housing.
'We have information that the company employing them did not reinstate them. It was a disciplinary measure against the strike in which they had participated,' Jean-Francois Coulomme, a representative of left-wing La France Insoumise party, told Al Jazeera. 'It's a strategy of ostracising these employees in particular.'
In February, Coulomme wrote to France's interior minister via a government accountability mechanism on the 'fate of the files submitted to the Paris Prefecture', demanding 'the legitimate regularisation of these workers'.
The letter remains unanswered.
'The arena workers' case is representative of a systemic problem. It's a good illustration of the fact that these workers are silenced due to the [precariousness] of their administrative situation,' Colomme said.
The CNT-SO union and so-called Gilets Noirs, or Black Vests – a collective of mostly undocumented migrants working to get administrative regularisation and housing rights for migrants in France – tried expediting the process through the city of Paris, as the city was one of the negotiating parties.
'We've plugged a few more holes by going through the mayor of Paris, because they're the intermediary between our contacts and the Paris prefecture. We want to know what the situation is,' Doums, a spokesperson for the Gilets Noirs, told Al Jazeera. 'Today, the situation is still, let's not say totally blocked, but a bit blocked at the level of the prefecture.'
Colomme suggested the Ministry of the Interior is preventing the dossiers from being approved.
'The prefectures take their orders from the ministry. So as far as we're concerned, the prefects simply apply the directives of the minister in charge,' Coulomme said.
Al Jazeera contacted the minister of the interior and Paris prefecture, but did not receive a comment by the time of publication.
The initially swift response and negotiations are a typical reaction when a city is scrutinised before major international events, but often there is no follow-through when the hype dies down.
'The state of exception that the Olympics bring can be really important for leveraging gains for workers,' Jules Boykoff, researcher and author of the book Power Games: A Political History of the Olympics, told Al Jazeera. 'The key is to lock in those gains while the hot glare of the Olympic spotlight still shines in your city. After that, it becomes much more difficult to take advantage of that Olympic moment to make promises to these workers.'
This can be an opportune time for people to push for rights, but the Olympics and other major sporting events also open the door for exploitation, especially for people in precarious situations like undocumented workers.
'This is just one more egregious example of taking advantage of people to create a sporting event that claims to benefit the many but actually just benefits the few,' Boykoff said. 'The Olympics tend to spotlight what we might call surplus populations – whether we're talking about expendable athletes or expendable workers who make the Olympic spectacle possible.'
Rahmani said, 'During the strike, all these people came and made big promises … These deputies and senators come to a demonstration or strike and make a commitment to regularise these workers, but in the end, there's no follow-up, and they tell you that they have no power.'
For years, France's government has hardened its stance against immigration.
In December 2023, the French Parliament passed a controversial immigration law that differentiates between foreigners 'in a situation of employment' and those who are not. The measure made it more difficult to receive social benefits for out-of-work expatriates.
The new regulations have played out in workplaces.
Between 2023 and 2024, according to official figures, the number of undocumented workers who were regularised dipped by 10 percent. Deportations, on the other hand, rose by more than a quarter.
'This ideology is currently affecting our country as a whole, with an instrumentalisation of the migration issue, which means we're taking a totally utilitarian approach,' Coulomme said.
On the ground, Doums said the Gilets Noirs have observed the same phenomenon.
'The political situation in this country concerning immigrants and foreigners is becoming increasingly complicated,' Doums stated. Still, he insisted the collective would keep pushing for their rights. 'We're not going to stop there. Even after regularising the 14 people, we're not going to stop.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Giroud returns to French football with Lille
Giroud returns to French football with Lille

Qatar Tribune

time4 hours ago

  • Qatar Tribune

Giroud returns to French football with Lille

PA Media/dpa Paris Olivier Giroud remains determined to prove himself all over again after returning to French football on a one-year deal with Lille. France's record goalscorer has headed back to Europe following a campaign with Major League Soccer side Los Angeles FC. Giroud, who turns 39 at the end of September, won the Serie A title at AC Milan in 2022, having moved to Italy from Chelsea where he had enjoyed success in the Champions League, Europa League and FA Cup. The veteran forward helped Montpellier secure the 2011-12 Ligue 1 title before he joined Arsenal, winning the FA Cup three times while with the Gunners. Giroud, who retired from international football last year, having scored 57 goals in 137 appearances and lifted the 2018 World Cup, is relishing tackling the next chapter with Lille. 'I need challenges, to challenge myself, that is what has driven me forward in my career,' Giroud said at a press conference where he was officially presented by Lille on Wednesday. 'This challenge speaks to me - joining a club that beat Real Madrid and came close to reaching the quarter-finals of the Champions League.'

Fate of major trade deal with EU hangs over Mercosur summit
Fate of major trade deal with EU hangs over Mercosur summit

Qatar Tribune

time4 hours ago

  • Qatar Tribune

Fate of major trade deal with EU hangs over Mercosur summit

Agencies The fate of a landmark trade deal with the European Union, which France is trying to block, looms large over a summit this week of South America's Mercosur bloc. Brussels in December struck a deal with Mercosur's founding membersArgentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay — which would allow the EU to sell more vehicles, machines and pharmaceuticals to South America in return for allowing in more meat, sugar, rice and soybeans from the region. The agreement has been 25 years in the making, but still needs to be ratified by EU member states and the EU parliament. It has faced stiff opposition from France, where farmers worry about being undercut by less-regulated Latin American peers, while enjoying backing from Germany, Spain and Portugal, among others. 'Today, the ball is in Europe's court,' Ariel Gonzalez Levaggi, director of the Center for International Studies at the Pontifical Catholic University of Argentina, told AFP. But 'there isn't much willingness on the part of Brussels to move forward, mainly because of the French resistance,' he added. EU and South American backers of the deal had hoped Trump's tariffs blitz could breathe new life into a deal that would give exporters on either side of the Atlantic new outlets for their products in the event of punishing US duties. For Florencia Rubiolo, a researcher at Conicet, Argentina's scientific and technical research council, it's 'of strategic interest for all Mercosur members, both individually, and as a bloc, to see this deal be ratified.' Among other things, she argued, it would show Argentina's libertarian President Javier Milei that there is value in being part of the group, after his government has railed against Mercosur's constraints on members striking solo trade deals. Milei is gunning for a free trade deal with the United States, and he has suggested he could walk away from Mercosur if necessary to clinch an agreement with Washington. The biannual Mercosur summit comes at a low point in relations between Brazil and Argentina, South America's biggest and second-biggest economies respectively. Milei, a huge fan of US President Donald Trump, has made no secret of his disdain for veteran leftist Lula, referring to him in the past as 'corrupt' and a 'Communist.' Lula has accused the Argentine of talking 'nonsense.' The contempt between the two was plain to see when Lula hosted Milei at a G20 summit in Rio de Janeiro last November. The tensions could be exacerbated if Lula uses his trip to Buenos Aires to visit left-wing ex-president Cristina Kirchner, who is serving a six-year sentence for fraud under house arrest. Kirchner on Tuesday requested permission for Lula to pay her a solidarity visit, in a move likely to anger her arch-nemesis Milei. It was not clear, however, whether Lula would risk upsetting his Argentine counterpart at home. 'We may be experiencing the worst period in relations between Brazil and Argentina, in terms of political convergence,' Juliana Peixoto, an expert in international relations at the Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences, told AFP. She said she nonetheless expected Mercosur, which also includes Bolivia, to endure the tensions.

Macron, Putin have first phone call in 2 years
Macron, Putin have first phone call in 2 years

Qatar Tribune

timea day ago

  • Qatar Tribune

Macron, Putin have first phone call in 2 years

dpa Paris French President Emmanuel Macron and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin have spoken on the phone for the first time in more than two and a half years. Following the more than two-hour conversation between the two, the discussion focused on Iran's nuclear programme and Russia's war against Ukraine, the Élysée Palace said on Tuesday. Macron is said to have emphasized with regard to Iran his desire to seek a diplomatic solution. This should enable a permanent resolution of the nuclear issue, the question of Iranian missiles, and the country's regional role. From France, it was stated that both politicians had decided to coordinate their actions and to discuss the matter again soon. With regard to Ukraine, Macron reportedly called for a swift ceasefire and the start of negotiations between Russia and Ukraine. The last phone call between the two was in September 2022. The Kremlin confirmed the phone call. It was said to have also covered the situation in Ukraine, alongside the Middle East. Putin is reported to have explained to Macron that the causes of the conflict with Kiev need to be eliminated. Additionally, he said it was necessary to recognize the reality on the ground. In doing so, Putin once again shifted the responsibility for the war he ordered onto Ukraine and renewed his territorial claims in the neighbouring country. In addition to Crimea, which it annexed in 2014, Russia demands at least the four eastern Ukrainian provinces of Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhya. Recently, Putin also stressed his intention to create a 'buffer zone' in the Ukrainian border area. This would bring further Ukrainian territories under Moscow's control.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store