the authorities are worried.
Chinese migrants have been pouring into Prato to work in the city's thousands of factories, warehouses and sweatshops that supply the cloth and yarns to the Italian fashion industry
Today Prato has the largest Chinese community in the country - about 25,000 people, nearly 15% of the city's population.
And the authorities are worried
Many of the Chinese here are 'clandestini' - illegal. We have big difficulties catching them. And since they arrived, crime in the city has risen," says Francesco Nannucci, the head of investigations at the Prato police.
The police patrol Prato's Chinatown every day - an area full of Chinese shops, services and restaurants. Nearly all of them have sprung up in the last few years.
On one raid, ten undocumented Chinese workers were discovered in a side-street sweatshop, machine-sewing clothes.
There was a child present, beds, a bathroom and a kitchen. They slept, cooked, worked and brought up their children in this small warehouse.

Milan's Chinatown holds examples of the merging cultures<br><br>Post edited by: linsi, at: 2007/08/03 17:58