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Milan Juvenile Prison: 9 out of 10 inmates are Egyptian, Tunisian, and Moroccan migrants. The chaplain announces similar figures in all juvenile prisons in northern Italy.

Milan Juvenile Prison: 9 out of 10 inmates are Egyptian, Tunisian, and Moroccan migrants. The chaplain announces similar figures in all juvenile prisons in northern Italy.

It's a shocking figure, but it's also found in other juvenile prisons in northern Italy, explains Don Claudio Burgio, chaplain at Beccaria. "The migration plan has changed; many of these young people travel across Europe in search of money, probably linked to an organization. Others could even be released from the IPM, but the communities are missing."

Yes, but it's a figure quite similar to that of all juvenile prisons in the North. In Milan, Turin, and Bologna, there are many unaccompanied foreign youths. In Naples, and in the South in general, the youths are mostly Italian.

After their release, yes, many return to prison: even two or three times . Some leave for other European countries, and then, if they are arrested in France, they return to Italy or Spain. There are real trips between these countries, but I don't know to what extent they are spontaneous and linked to the impulsiveness of young people, often very young, nor if there is a real organization behind all this. I don't know, but this phenomenon of nomadism is very visible everywhere in Europe.

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