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by Alessandra Cardone
MILAN, Feb. 2 (Xinhua) -- As Italy's economic capital, and largest city near the borders with other European countries, Milan has always been a major attraction for those looking for a better life.
After drawing hundreds of thousands of Italians from the impoverished southern regions in the past, it now stands at a crucial crossroads of the new century's migration flows.
According to official data, the city hosted 120,800 migrants and refugees from October 2013 to January 2017. The figure includes 21,250 minors.
The municipality set up 13 hosting facilities across the city, including a first reception center behind the central station. At the ""Hub"" -- as it is called -- all new arrivals are accommodated, registered, and later assigned to other centers according to available places.
Run by Project Arca Foundation, the major facility's official capacity is 70 beds.
But more camp beds are added when needed, which almost always seems to be the case.
""Last night, we had 170 people sleeping here at the Hub,"" Sabrina Liberalato, the Project Arca supervisor for refugees, told Xinhua in a recent interview.
""The average number has dropped to about 180 to 200 guests per night in the past weeks, due to the cold and a decrease in the flow of people arriving to southern Italy (after crossing the Mediterranean).""
The Hub looked decent and clean. Migrants and refugees were directed to a registration desk as soon as they arrived in the main hall.
On the desk's left side, some tables with computers were crowded with young men and women. In the recreation zone, people would sit for a chat or a hot drink at a long table. At the end of the hall, a play area for children was set up with the help of Save the Children and Albero della Vita charities.
There was also a small consultation room, where new arrivals would receive a first medical check, and a soup kitchen in an adjacent area providing three meals a day.
At the end of January, Milan's 13 centers hosted 3,634 migrants and refugees overall, close to the 4,000-threshold local authorities look at as the limit beyond which the city's network would be in distress.
Despite this, Milan's current policy was that of remaining ""open"" despite possible difficulties. ""We cannot boast to be an open city only when it suits us,"" Milan Mayor Giuseppe Sala said.
""We cannot welcome a bright and wealthy student from Korea to our universities -- just as an example -- but refuse to accept the fact that migrants and refugees are transiting our city.""
The mayor stressed that Milan already had a multi-ethnic ""soul"", with 18 percent of its population of non-European origin, including 70,000 from Muslim-majority countries.
Provided that laws and a common sense of duty were respected, ""being an open city is always a benefit,"" Sala said.
Such an approach acknowledged a basic fact: Italy had remained on the frontline of Europe's migration crisis in 2016, despite a generally declining trend.
Some 362,376 arrivals were registered through all Mediterranean routes -- including Greece, Italy, and Spain -- last year, compared with over one million in 2015, according to the UN refugee agency UNHCR.