Speaking of his own experiences of sleeping rough during the Nineties, O’Rourke recalled being kicked awake, repeatedly arrested by police as a demonstration of their power, and having a supermarket pour bleach on discarded sandwiches so they could not be scavenged.
During the emergency meeting for parliament’s all-party group on ending homelessness, he cautioned against further dehumanisation of rough sleepers.
“That level of cruelty has always stayed with me. Primarily I feel that people should be treated in a way that’s not as cruel as that. That seemed inhuman to me,” said O’Rourke.
“It’s not just the physical injuries that hurt the most. Being ignored, being spat on, having rubbish thrown on you. All of those things leave their own marks.”
Billed as the replacement for the 1824 Vagrancy Act – the 200-year-old law that criminalises rough sleeping and begging that the Tories have vowed to scrap – critics say parts of the Criminal Justice Bill are not needed and will have a severe impact on the most vulnerable.
MPs met to organise resistance against the bill – hoping to succeed in passing an amendment stripping out the anti-homelessness measures. The amendment is backed by cross-party MPs including Lib Dem Layla Moran and Tory Tracey Crouch.
Youth homelessness charity Centrepoint, who revealed that hundreds of young people are being criminalised under existing laws, said police already have sufficient powers to tackle anti-social behaviour.
“The government promised to end rough sleeping by 2024, and instead the number of those who are homeless is actually soaring, and the response from the government is to actually criminalise those individuals,” said co-chair Paula Barker, Labour MP for Liverpool Wavertree.
“The bill dehumanises those of us who are forced to sleep rough, and introduces ways for people to be criminalised based on an individual’s opinion.”
Bob Blackman, co-chair and Conservative MP for Harrow East, said: “We need to help people that are homeless, not arrest them.
“They need help and assistance, being treated with dignity as human beings rather than further punitive measures against them.”
He added that until the housing crisis is addressed, rough sleeping will continue: “If we don’t actually get genuinely affordable housing, then we’re never going to deal with the problems of street homelessness.”
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