"It was really bizarre," said Dipama. "I told him that I didn't know what that had to do with his rental. And he hung up on me." Dipama, originally from Burkina Faso, swiftly realised he had overlooked a stipulation listed plainly in the 2019 newspaper advert: "Germans only." It was a glimpse of the kind of discrimination minorities across Europe have long faced in the housing market. In recent years, as cities grapple with a shortage of decent, affordable accommodation, campaigners have warned that the housing crisis is having a disproportionate impact on people of colour and other minorities.
For these communities, "it's a dual crisis", said Magda Boulabiza, of the European Network Against Racism. "Discrimination means racialised minorities are less able to access housing. And then this intersects with income inequalities." A 2017 EU-wide survey of 25,500 people with an immigrant or ethnic minority background found nearly a quarter said that in the previous five years they had faced discrimination over housing - from being denied the chance to view flats to rejections after they revealed their background.
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