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| Many of the 39 victims are believed to be Vietnamese after families said their loved ones were missing |
Vietnam police have arrested two people for trafficking in connection with the death of 39 migrants whose bodies were found in a truck in Britain, many of them feared to be Vietnamese.
The move
comes after British police arrested four people over the tragedy and are now
seeking to question two brothers from Northern Ireland who have links to the
road-haulage and shipping business.
The victims
were initially identified by British police as Chinese, but many are now
believed to be Vietnamese after families in central Vietnam said their loved
ones had not been heard from.
Vietnam
said Friday two people were arrested for alleged involvement in the case, which
has exposed the dangers of illegal people-smuggling from the Asian country to
Europe.
Many of the
suspected victims came from central Ha Tinh province, where the two arrests
were made in connection with "the case of 39 dead bodies found in a
container truck in the UK", according to a statement on the local police
website.
The pair
were accused of "organising and brokering for other people to go abroad
and stay abroad illegally", it said.
The bodies
of the victims were found in a refrigerated trailer on October 23 in an
industrial park in Essex, east of London. Police said the truck came from a
Belgian port.
The
25-year-old driver of the truck, Maurice Robinson from Northern Ireland, has
been charged with 39 counts of manslaughter.
He was also
charged with conspiracy to traffic people, conspiracy to assist unlawful
immigration, and money-laundering.
Prosecutors
said he was involved in an international trafficking ring as he appeared in
court this week.
Three
others who were arrested have been released on bail.
Several
Vietnamese families said they heard from relatives before their crossing into
the UK but have had no contact since.
Vietnam has
said Britain sent documents to help with the complicated task of identifying
the bodies, many of whom were believed to be carrying falsified passports.
DNA samples
have also been taken from relatives in Vietnam to help with the process.
But so far
none of the dead have been officially identified.
The truck
tragedy has plunged communities in central Vietnam into mourning, as families
desperately wait for news.
The region
has long been a source of illegal migration to Britain for people seeking
better lives.
Migrants
often work in nail bars or cannabis farms, heavily indebted and vulnerable to
exploitation.
British detectives probing the deaths of 39 Asian migrants in a refrigerated truck near London renewed their appeal for two brothers in the haulage business to help with the investigation https://t.co/YZlaMa3sCq— AFP news agency (@AFP) 1 november 2019

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