Skip to main content

Queues Form Outside Milan Food Banks as Crisis Bites Ahead of Christmas

Support Provided By


This story was originally published Dec. 14, 2020 by the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

MILAN, Dec 14 (Reuters) - Long queues have been forming outside food banks and help centres in Italy's financial capital Milan as the economic devastation caused by the coronavirus has deepened before Christmas.

As case numbers surged after the summer, Italy — the first European country to be struck by the pandemic and among the worst hit — has seen its stagnant economy dealt a blow by lockdowns to try to halt the spread of COVID-19.

People queue for free food as Italians struggle to cope in a tough economic climate amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in Milan, Italy December 14, 2020. | REUTERS/Flavio Lo Scalzo
People queue for free food as Italians struggle to cope in a tough economic climate amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in Milan, Italy December 14, 2020. | REUTERS/Flavio Lo Scalzo

"During this period of the pandemic, the numbers have gone up," said Luigi Rossi, vice-president of local aid group Pane Quotidiano, as a queue stretched down the block outside the center in the south of Milan. "We certainly believe that the more this crisis goes on, the more there will be."

Even in prosperous Milan, which had been riding a major property boom before the pandemic, the crisis has bitten deeply as large parts of the economy have come to a halt.

Many who had been just about managing have been forced to ask for help in a city that has prided itself on being Italy's economic motor and an exception to the malaise that has haunted the rest of the country for decades.

"There are so many people like me. It's the new poor," said Alberto, 66, who did not want to give his last name.

With the trade fairs that contributed heavily to Milan's pre-crisis economy now closed, he has been out of work and has been coming to the center for the past five months.

"I've still got to pay the rent, I've got to buy food and even though my partner is working, it's not enough," he said.

Like the centers run by other charitable groups, Pane Quotidiano, which has operated in Milan for more than a century, has been flat out, open seven days a week from 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. and handling an average of 800 people a day.

While the government has imposed a firing freeze and offered support to companies furloughing workers, many have complained of long delays in getting payments. For the army of home carers, cleaners, restaurant staff and others employed unofficially and paid in cash, there has been no support at all.

"How can you get by?" asked Maria-Rosa Mamone, 76, who came to the center to get food and a Christmas present for her grandchild. With three people at home and 600 euros ($700) in rent to pay every month, she is struggling. "At least I can come here. There's everything here, bread, milk ... "

Writing by James Mackenzie; Editing by Janet Lawrence.

Support Provided By
Read More
Migrant workers from Myanmar who lost their jobs line up for free foods from volunteers following the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Bangkok, Thailand April 23, 2020. | REUTERS/Soe Zeya Tun

Thailand Allows Thousands of Migrants to Extend Work Permits

Activists fear the cost of the process could drive migrant workers deeper into debt and lead to labour exploitation.
Educator Taneka Mckoy Phipps teaches a lesson with a blackboard painted on a wall, in a low-income neighborhood, during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Kingston, Jamaica October 27, 2020. October 27, 2020. | REUTERS/Gladstone Taylor

Jamaican Teacher Turns Kingston Walls into Blackboards

With schools closed under COVID-19, Taneka Mckoy has created open-air classrooms by writing lessons on building walls.
ARCHIVE PHOTO: Women work on a production line at the mobile phone factory in Assuit, Egypt September 30, 2018. | REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany

Tech-Savvy Women Could Beat COVID-19 Job Blues in the Arab World

In a region where only one in four women works, experts say those who retrain could tap surging demand for digital skills.