
Her parents are Croatian, but she was born in Venice. In 1993. She is sixteen. She celebrated her birthday on 12 September with an impromptu surprise party organised by the older inmates of the Centre for Identification and Expulsion of Ponte Galeria, Rome. The law prohibits the detention of minors in deportation centres. But Elvira- this is what we’ll call the girl without revealing her real name for privacy reasons- has no documents to prove her age. And the X-ray of the wrist - obligatory in these cases - has given a negative response. Medicine says Elvira is 25 years old. Elvira is fluent in Italian, because she grew up in our country. Her parents fled from the war in Croatia in 1991. And they returned only a few years after the end of the conflict. Elvira does not remember the dates, but she says she was a child. At home, however, she always watched Italian TV, and her parents taught her and her older brother to speak Italian. It was with her 26-year-old brother that Elvira left for her summer holiday in Italy, three months ago. They came into the country legally, with a stamp on their passports at customs. The problem arose in Messina.