
Italy's fast fashion hub becomes Chinese mafia battlefield
Tescaroli has warned that the escalation in crime has become a huge business operation and moved beyond Italy, particularly to France and Spain. The gangs are battling to control the production of hundreds of millions of clothes hangers each year - the market is estimated to be worth 100 million euros ($115 million) - and the bigger prize of transporting apparel.
The Chinese mafia also 'promotes the illegal immigration of workers of various nationalities' for Prato, Tescaroli told AFP. The veteran anti-mafia prosecutor said the 'phenomenon has been underestimated', allowing the mafia to expand its reach. With one of Europe's largest Chinese communities, the city of nearly 200,000 people has seen Chinese business owners and factory workers beaten or threatened in recent months, with cars and warehouses burned.
The ex-head of Prato's police investigative unit, Francesco Nannucci, said the Chinese mafia run betting dens, prostitution and drugs - and provide their Italian counterparts with under-the-radar money transfers. For mafia leaders, 'to be able to command in Prato means being able to lead in much of Europe,' Nannucci told AFP.
Spools of sewing thread in a fast-fashion outlet factory owned by a Chinese company in Prato, central Italy.
A Pakistani worker gives a phone call during a permanent strike in a fast-fashion outlet factory owned by a Chinese company in Prato.
A Pakistani worker rests during a permanent strike in a fast-fashion outlet factory owned by a Chinese company.
Clothers ready to be shipped outside a fast-fashion outlet in the industrial district of Prato.
A sewing machine in a fast-fashion outlet factory.
Spools of sewing thread in a fast-fashion outlet factory.
A Pakistani worker checks a bicycle during a permanent strike in a fast-fashion outlet factory.
'Well-oiled system'
Chinese groups in the district thrive on the so-called 'Prato system', long rife with corruption and irregularities, particularly in the fast-fashion sector, such as labour and safety violations plus tax and customs fraud. Prato's 5,000-odd apparel and knitwear businesses, mostly small, Chinese-run subcontractors, churn out low-priced items that end up in shops across Europe.
They pop up quickly and shut down just as fast, playing a cat-and-mouse game with authorities to avoid taxes or fines. Fabric is smuggled from China, evading customs duties and taxes, while profits are returned to China via illegal money transfers.
To stay competitive, the sector relies on cheap, around-the-clock labor, mostly from China and Pakistan, which Tescaroli told a Senate committee in January was 'essential for its proper functioning'. 'It's not just one or two bad apples, but a well-oiled system they use, and do very well - closing, reopening, not paying taxes,' said Riccardo Tamborrino, a Sudd Cobas union organizer leading strikes on behalf of immigrants.
Investigators say the immigrants work seven days a week, 13 hours a day for about three euros ($3.40) an hour. Tamborrino said Prato's apparel industry was 'free from laws, from contracts'. 'It's no secret,' he said. 'All this is well known.'
'Miss Fashion'
Trucks lumber day and night through the streets of Prato's industrial zone, an endless sprawl of asphalt lined with warehouses and apparel showrooms with names like 'Miss Fashion' and 'Ohlala Pronto Moda'. Open metal doors reveal loaded garment racks, rolls of fabric and stacks of boxes awaiting shipment - the final step controlled by Zhang Naizhong, whom prosecutors dub the 'boss of bosses' within Italy's Chinese mafia.
A 2017 court document described Zhang as the 'leading figure in the unscrupulous circles of the Chinese community' in Europe, with a monopoly on the transport sector and operations in France, Spain, Portugal and Germany. Zhang Dayong, the man killed in Rome alongside his girlfriend in April, was Zhang Naizhong's deputy. The shootings followed three massive fires set at his warehouses outside Paris and Madrid in previous months.
Nannucci believes Naizhong could be in China, after his 2022 acquittal for usury in a huge ongoing Chinese mafia trial plagued by problems - including a lack of translators and missing files. On a recent weekday, a handful of Pakistani men picketed outside the company that had employed them, after it shut down overnight having just agreed to give workers a contract under Italian law. Muhammed Akram, 44, saw his boss quietly emptying the factory of sewing machines, irons and other equipment. 'Sneaky boss,' he said, in broken Italian. Chinese garment workers, who are in the majority in Prato and often brought to Italy by the mafia, never picket, union activists say - they are too frightened to protest.
Trading favors
Changes in apparel manufacturing, globalization and migration have all contributed to the so-called 'Prato system'. So has corruption. In May 2024, the second-in-command within Prato's Carabinieri police was accused of giving Italian and Chinese entrepreneurs - among them a chamber of commerce businessman - access to the police database for information, including on workers. Police complaints from attacked workers 'ended up in a drawer, never reaching the court', Sudd Cobas organizer Francesca Ciuffi told AFP.
Prato's mayor resigned in June in a corruption investigation, accused of trading favors with the businessman for votes. In recent months, the union has secured regular contracts under national law for workers at over 70 companies. That will not help those caught in Prato's mafia war, however, where 'bombs have exploded and warehouses have been burned down', said Ciuffi. 'People who wake up in the morning, quietly going to work, risk getting seriously injured, if not worse, because of a war that doesn't concern them.' — AFP

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Kuwait Times
2 days ago
- Kuwait Times
Ukraine's funeral workers bearing the burden of war
SUMY, Ukraine: At a funeral home in the northeastern Ukrainian city of Sumy, Svitlana Ostapenko paced around as she prepared the dead for their final journey. After five years of working in the funeral home, she was used to seeing dead bodies, but the growing number of dead—including young people from Russia's invasion—was starting to overwhelm even her. 'Death doesn't discriminate between young and old,' the funeral director told AFP, breaking down in tears. Ukraine's funeral workers, who are living through the war themselves and have been repeatedly exposed to violent death throughout Russia's invasion launched in early 2022, are shouldering a mounting emotional toll while supporting grieving families. What's more, Ostapenko's hometown of Sumy near the Russian border, has come under bombardment throughout the invasion but advancing Russian troops have brought the fighting to as close as 20 kilometers (12 miles) away. Every day, Ostapenko lays the region's dead in coffins. 'One way or another, I'm getting by. I take sedatives, that's all,' the 59-year-old said. There has been no shortage of work. On April 13, a double Russian ballistic missile strike on the city killed 35 people and wounded dozens of others. Residents pass without giving a second thought to the facades of historic buildings that were pockmarked by missile fragments. 'We buried families, a mother and her daughter, a young woman of 33 who had two children,' said Ostapenko. During attacks at night, she said she takes refuge in her hallway—her phone in hand in case her services are needed. Every day, the Ukrainian regional authorities compile reports on Russian strikes in a war that has claimed tens of thousands of lives. Petro Bondar, Svitlana's colleague, said he noted the names of the victims in his notebook to 'understand how much grief these bombings cause.' 'They're not just numbers,' he told AFP. 'They were living people, souls.' Igor Kruzo knew them only too well. His job is to immortalize their names in granite tombstones, along with portraits he paints stroke by stroke. The 60-year-old artist and veteran said he found it difficult to live with the faces he has rendered for gravestones. Soldiers, civilians, children, 'all local people,' he said. 'When you paint them, you observe their image, each with their own destiny,' he said, never speaking of himself in the first person, avoiding eye contact. At the cemetery, bereaved families told him about the deaths of their loved ones. 'They need to be heard.' The conversations helped him cope psychologically, he said. 'But it all cuts you to the bone,' he added. He used to paint elderly people, but found himself rejuvenating their features under his brush. He remembered a mother who was killed protecting her child with her body at the beginning of the war. 'A beautiful woman, full of life', whom he knew, he said. 'And you find yourself there, having to engrave her image.' In recent months, his work had taken an increasingly heavier toll. In the new wing of the cemetery reserved for soldiers, a sea of yellow and blue flags was nestled among the gravestones. Enveloped by pine trees, workers bustled around a dozen newly dug holes, ready to welcome young combatants. In February, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky announced that 46,000 Ukrainian soldiers had been killed since 2022, and 'tens of thousands' more were missing or in captivity—a figure that observers believed to be an underestimate. Russia has not published its combat losses, but a tally by the independent newspaper Meduza and the BBC estimates the military death toll at more than 119,000. 'The dead appear in my dreams,' Kruzo said. He said he saw soldiers crying over graves, or his daughter's friends lying lifeless in the cemetery aisle. 'For the past three years, all my dreams have been about the war. All of them.' Ironically, he said he was drowning himself in work because 'it's easier'. He said he had never broken down, that he was tough man who served in the Soviet army, but that he was living in a 'kind of numbness.' 'I don't want to get depressed,' he said, taking a drag on his cigarette. Behind him, a young, pregnant woman fixed her eyes on the portrait of a soldier smiling at her from the marble slab set in the earth. – AFP

Kuwait Times
2 days ago
- Kuwait Times
Judges in Maradona trial reject request to step aside
Diego Maradona BUENOS AIRES: Judges appointed to try the medical team of late Argentine football legend Diego Maradona over his death rejected on Wednesday a request by the defense for two of the judicial panel to be recused. The first trial into Maradona's 2020 death collapsed in May after one of the judges was sensationally revealed to have taken part in a clandestine documentary about the trial. A new three-judge bench was appointed in July to conduct a fresh trial. Lawyers for Maradona's personal physician, Leopoldo Luque, one of seven people charged with culpable homicide over the star's death, had asked for two judges to be removed from the case, saying they feared they would 'not be impartial.' The judges rejected the request, saying it was based on 'conjecture' and 'speculation.' No date has yet been set for the new trial. Maradona, considered one of the world's greatest ever players, died in November 2020 at the age of 60 while recovering from brain surgery. He died of heart failure and acute pulmonary edema—a condition where fluid accumulates in the lungs—two weeks after going under the knife. His medical team was put on trial over the conditions of his home convalescence, which prosecutors described as grossly negligent. They risk prison terms of between eight and 25 years if convicted of 'homicide with possible intent,' or pursuing a course of action despite knowing it could lead to his death. – AFP

Kuwait Times
3 days ago
- Kuwait Times
M23 killed ‘319 civilians' in DR Congo in July: UN
DOHA: Qatar's chief negotiator Mohammed al-Khulaifi (center) stands between peace mediator Sumbu Sita Mambu, a high representative of the head of state in the Democratic Republic of Congo (seated-left) and Rwanda-backed armed group M23 executive secretary Benjamin Mbonimp (right) as they sign a ceasefire deal in Doha on July 19, 2025.-- AFP GENEVA: UN rights chief Volker Turk on Wednesday denounced the Rwanda-backed M23 militia, which he said had killed at least 319 civilians in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo in July. With Rwanda's support the M23 has seized swathes of the mineral-rich Congolese east from the DRC's army since its resurgence in 2021, triggering a spiraling humanitarian crisis in a region already riven by three decades of conflict. July's violence came only weeks after the Congolese government and the M23 signed a declaration of principle on June 19 reaffirming their commitment to a permanent ceasefire, following months of broken truces. 'I am appalled by the attacks on civilians by the M23 and other armed groups in eastern DRC amid continued fighting, despite the ceasefire that was recently signed in Doha,' Turk said in a statement. 'All attacks against civilians must stop immediately, and all those responsible must be held to account,' he added. Turk's UN Human Rights Office said it had documented multiple attacks in North Kivu, South Kivu and Ituri provinces, in the conflict-ridden east of the country bordering Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi. In the agreement signed in Doha, the warring parties agreed to 'uphold their commitment to a permanent ceasefire', refraining from 'hate propaganda' and 'any attempt to seize by force new positions'. The deal includes a roadmap for restoring state authority in eastern DRC, and an agreement for the two sides to open direct talks toward a comprehensive peace agreement. It followed a separate agreement signed in Washington by the Congolese government and Rwanda, which has a history of intervention in the eastern DRC stretching back to the 1990s. Rwandan President Paul Kagame and Congolese President Felix Tshisekedi are due to meet in the coming months to firm up the Washington agreement, whose terms have not yet been implemented. 'I urge the signatories and facilitators of both the Doha and Washington agreements to ensure that they rapidly translate into safety, security and real progress for civilians in the DRC, who continue to endure the devastating consequences of these conflicts,' said Turk. - AFP