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Igloos warm tourists’ hearts as migrants fill hotel

| Updated: February 12, 2018 12:02:44


In this photo taken on Friday, Feb. 2, 2018, Moussa Sissoko, of Mali, left, helps build an igloo with Davide Midali, owner of an igloo village in San Simone di Valleve, near Bergamo, northern Italy. - AP In this photo taken on Friday, Feb. 2, 2018, Moussa Sissoko, of Mali, left, helps build an igloo with Davide Midali, owner of an igloo village in San Simone di Valleve, near Bergamo, northern Italy. - AP

San Simone, a tiny village in the Italian Alps, once had a thriving ski trade. But financial issues kept the lifts closed this winter. A local hotel houses about 80 African asylum-seekers.

But restaurant owner Davide Midali saw promise in his struggling village and its new residents. To lure tourists, he decided to build igloos that could be rented overnight.

Several immigrants saw Midali working and offered to help. The six snow domes they built together have been fully booked on weekends since mid-January.

Midali also thinks he and the migrants understand each other better now and maybe have set a neighbourly example.

Omar Kanteh, a Gambian citizen who came to Italy nine months ago, feels the same. He says he wants to stay in San Simone if Italy approves his asylum application.

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