Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05MILAN519
2005-11-17 05:38:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Consulate Milan
Cable title:  

Subject: Multiethnic Milan -- Caritas

Tags:  SMIG SOCI ELAB PGOV ASEC IT EUN 
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170538Z Nov 05
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 MILAN 000519 

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: SMIG SOCI ELAB PGOV ASEC IT EUN
SUBJECT: Subject: Multiethnic Milan -- Caritas
Ambrosiana's Immigration Report

Ref: 04 Milan 357

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 MILAN 000519

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: SMIG SOCI ELAB PGOV ASEC IT EUN
SUBJECT: Subject: Multiethnic Milan -- Caritas
Ambrosiana's Immigration Report

Ref: 04 Milan 357


1. (U) Summary: Caritas Ambrosiana recently held a
conference to present Caritas' annual report on
immigration. While the report included national
statistics, the focus of the presentation in Milan was on
the Lombardy Region in general and Milan specifically.
Almost a quarter of Italy's immigrants live in Lombardy,
with the number growing dramatically. The report
included data through December 2004 and covered such
issues as the changing demographics of immigration,
immigrant education levels and occupational trends. A
key speaker noted the menial jobs many immigrants take
despite higher than average education levels and called
on local industry to proactively integrate immigrants
into the labor pool. End summary.

Numbers Growing Quickly
--------------


2. (U) According to Caritas' recently launched annual
report on immigration, the number of documented
immigrants in Italy grew from approximately 2,200,000 at
the beginning of 2004 to 2,786,340 by the end of the year
-- an increase of approximately 500,000. Almost a
quarter of Italy's total documented immigrant population
lives in Lombardy (652,563 or 23.4 percent). As in past
years, almost half the immigrants in Lombardy live in
Milan and surrounding communities (308,640 or 47.3
percent). Over ten percent of the student population in
Milan is non-Italian, the highest rate in Italy. City of
Milan census data reported 143,125 registered foreigners
living in Milan, an increase of 34,859 (32.2 percent)
over the prior year. Caritas credited the dramatic
increase in part to a verification of census data in 2003
that led to a decrease in number of registered foreign
residents and in part to the implementation of the Bossi-
Fini law of 2002.

National and Religious Breakdowns
--------------


3. (U) The report broke Milan's immigrant population down
into the following groups: 35 percent Asian, 23.1 percent
African, 22.4 percent from the Americas, 7.1 percent EU
and 11.5 percent European non-EU. Countries with
dramatic increases since last year's report included:
Ukraine (268 percent),Moldova (235 percent),Gabon (200

percent),Bolivia (168 percent) and Ecuador (152
percent). Over 44 percent of the immigrants (in?) the
province of Lombardy are Christians (half of whom are
Catholic); 37.7 percent are Muslims, and 18.1 percent are
affiliated with other religious groups including Judaism,
Hinduism and Buddhism.

Higher Education -- Lower Jobs
--------------


4. (U) Contrary to popular perception, immigrants in
Italy have achieved higher levels of education on average
than native Italians. Whereas only 7.5 percent of
Italians graduate from university, the report claims 12.1
percent of foreign immigrants hold a university degree.
According to Caritas, immigrants currently make up around
9 percent of the total Italian work force, concentrated
in menial labor and manual work such as construction,
hotels, agriculture, industrial labor and domestic work.
Caritas maintains that immigrants are "unfairly
stereotyped" into these positions due to "lack of
integration into society and general societal
prejudices'."

Here to Stay
--------------


5. (U) However, since 2000, the number of immigrants
owning their own businesses has steadily increased. A
recent article in the International Herald Tribune,
reported that at the end of last year there were 10,000
companies in Milan owned by non-EU citizens -- a twenty
percent increase over the previous year. Egyptians are
at the front of the pack in this respect, owning more
than 2,000 companies (followed by the Chinese, Moroccans,
Peruvians, and Bangladeshis). The same article reported
that 13 percent of all real estate transactions in Milan
involve non-Europeans. (Note: A police contact recently
told Econoff that Egyptians own over 80 percent of the
pizzerias in Milan. While it may not be a confirmed
statistic, this anecdotal example indicates that these
immigrants see themselves as long-term residents and are
starting to weave themselves into Milan's social fabric.)

Call for Further Integration
--------------


6. (U) A major theme of the conference was the need for
better integration of immigrants through fair labor
practices. Given the statistically higher level of
education, Caritas recommends that local businesses
implement strategies to actively recruit immigrant
workers, "putting an end to harmful stereotypes of
immigrants as day laborers and maids." Early in the
presentation Caritas Director Don Roberto Davanzo chided
businesses for "ignoring their social responsibilities"
and not hiring more immigrants, arguing, "the
responsibility of Italian business is not only to turn a
fiscal profit, but also to help advance society."
Davanzo further argued that fair labor practices were the
best way to integrate immigrants into society. He
concluded by saying that the greatest threat to security
is not diversity but rather social exclusion.

Comment
--------------


7. (SBU) On average, the new immigrants are younger than
the rest of the population. Almost half the Italian
population is over 50, while amongst new immigrants this
percentage drops to less than ten. One out of every five
babies born in Milan is born to a foreign mother.
Integrating these young immigrants into the local work
force is critical. Reftel remarked on the challenges
politicians face in integrating the growing flows of new
immigrants, particularly in Northern Italy where the need
to integrate even greater numbers of newcomers must
compete with the somewhat xenophobic view of the
separatist Northern League. While Davanzo's call for
quasi affirmative action policies with regard to
immigrant hiring policies will be a hard sell, the need
to effectively address the question of how to integrate
the growing number of foreign youth is all the more
urgent, particularly as local politicians, law
enforcement and the general public watch with great
interest the violence unfolding in nearby France.

Graze#