Domain Registration

UK migrant truck death: Arrests in Ireland and Vietnam

  • November 01, 2019

Dublin’s High Court on Friday remanded a 23-year-old man from Northern Ireland, pending possible extradition to Britain, over bodies found in a refrigerated truck near London on October 23.

Police in Vietnam, where many of the victims are thought to have originated, on Friday said they had detained two persons and summoned others for questioning.

Police in the English county of Essex, meanwhile, urged two hauliers — identified as Ronan and Christopher Hughes from Northern Ireland — to help in the probe.

Read more: Vietnamese police take forensic samples from relatives of missing

“We urge anyone who has been in contact with them or has any information about where they are to get in contact with us,” said leading Essex detective Dan Stoten.

The alleged driver of the truck,  a 25-year-old from Northern Ireland, has already been charged over the deaths. He faces 39 counts of manslaughter as well as human trafficking and immigration offenses.

Identification still awaited

The bodies of eight women and 31 men were found west of London inside a container that had arrived in Britain from Zeebrugge in Belgium.

Autopsies have been carried out, but no identities or formal causes of death have been published by British authorities.

October 23 2019, the refrigerated truck at an industrial park in Grays, west of London

Vietnamese village awaits news

Families in the Vietnamese rural village of Dien Thinh told Associated Press of fears that two young men — aged 18 and 30 — were among those missing.

Both had last contacted home on October 22. They had lived in France since 2017, and had intended to reach Britain.

Read more: Hungarian court jails four over 71 migrant deaths

One family said it had borrowed the equivalent of $17,500 (€15,700) from a bank to pay for its son, Hoang Van Tiep, to first be smuggled to France. There, he had worked in restaurants, sending money home.

To reach England, the family said it had last month paid an additional installment to traffickers.

Since late October, the family said it had not been asked for the second and final payment.

Some migration ‘legal,’ some not

Truong Cong Suu, the Labor department head in the central Vietnamese district where the village of Dien Thinh is located, said about 1,000 residents took legal routes to work overseas each year — normally via registered hiring agencies.

However, a further 200 to 300 went through illegitimate channels, Suu said.

ipj/rc (AP, Reuters, AFP)

Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/uk-migrant-truck-death-arrests-in-ireland-and-vietnam/a-51086172?maca=en-rss-en-all-1573-rdf

Related News

Search

Get best offer

Booking.com
%d bloggers like this: