Index – National – It won’t be easier for the homeless, but it may not be any harder



[ad_1]

There are also empty spaces in the night heaters where the needy wait.

The index was reported by Emília Morva, Director of the Central Hungary Region of the Hungarian Maltese Charity Service. Anyone visiting an institution in Malta will get help without showing a negative PCR test.

The government has imposed curfew restrictions for thirty days starting Wednesday to prevent the coronavirus from spreading even more intensely. According to Viktor Orbán, a curfew came into effect between eight in the afternoon and five in the morning, and you have to get home at 8 at night. The only exceptions to curfew are commuting to work and extraordinary events.

Even during the first wave of the epidemic, organizations and institutions dealing with the homeless tried to invite the homeless to accommodation, such as

under the new rules, anyone who stays on the street commits an offense.

Some organizations fear that the police will start fining the homeless for strictly following the rules.

There is a mask for those without a lid.

Street social workers from the Charity Service regularly visit people who live on the street, give them masks and disinfectants, and try to convince them to enter one of the warming rooms at night, said Emília Morva.

He added: the key is that

If a police officer encounters homeless people at night in a public place, they must first be asked to go to accommodation and may even contact homeless shelters by phone to find out where there is still space.

The capital’s municipality surveyed the most vulnerable groups in Budapest in May: residents of nursing homes and shelters for the homeless. According to this, only 1,577 percent of the 8,577 inmates, the homeless, nurses and those who work directly in care tested positive, for a total of 132 people.

Friendless man

This ratio cannot be too high even today – believes Gábor Iványi, the President of the Charitable Association for Protection.

However, the new exit restriction has an impact on the homeless,

For those who have entered the night warming place so far around 10pm, they must now arrive earlier.

But if he hadn’t arrived at the door by 8pm, where could the police take the homeless person they caught on the street?

Iványi asked the poetic question. He added that they are trying to reduce congestion in the shelter, leaving more space between beds, stricter hygiene standards have been implemented, everyone has a fever upon entering the institution, and clients must complete a questionnaire. The Protection Charity Association is still working to find more masks and other hygiene equipment at affordable prices.

If symptoms are evident in someone, they are isolated according to protocol until ambulances arrive. At the same time, the Association acts in good faith when entering.

A negative test is not a prerequisite for someone to enter a homeless shelter.

The Protection Charity Association believes that the virus no longer affects homeless people with the virus. In fact, they may be a bit more immune.

The police don’t toughen up

Márton Gede lived closely the difficulties of living on the street. The activist from The City Everyone has lived on the streets for several years and still keeps in touch, as he himself puts it, with the “people of the street”, so he has direct information about the daily lives of the homeless. during the coronary virus.

According to Márton Gede, the police often meet homeless people who spend the night on the streets of the area, so they do not mind that some people spend the night outdoors, he explains the reasons why the number of rapes it did not increase during the restrictions that took effect in early November.

Some of my acquaintances are already prepared for the new situation, they have found areas where they can disappear.

After several years on the streets, the man with a college degree now lives in a shelter for the homeless and gives lectures, and also supports the work of the City for All group. It also explains in a similar way why the homeless are not more affected by the virus.

Although their bodies have been weakened, life on the street also gives them immunity.

No mash, just a mistake

In his opinion, they do not use night heaters because some find it difficult to endure the discipline demanded of them in homeless shelters and also insist on living independently. He added that not theft is the biggest problem in hostels, there is a more compelling reason to be reluctant to sleep in hostels. Márton Gede emphasized that the prohibition of alcohol is a great challenge for those who want to spend the night in an institution. Also, in one or two heaters, the bed bugs also multiplied enormously.

Book cover: Mónus Márton / MTI



[ad_2]