The Phnom Penh Post

UK police say 39 found dead in truck were Chinese nationals

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BRITISH police said on Thursday that 39 people found dead in a truck near London were all believed to be Chinese nationals, as officers conduct the country’s largest murder probe in more than a decade.

Emergency workers made the grisly discovery early on Wednesday inside the refrigerat­ed container of a truck parked in an industrial area east of London, shortly after it had arrived on a ferry from Belgium.

The case has triggered shock and outrage in Britain, with Prime Minister Boris Johnson describing it as an “unimaginab­le tragedy”.

The local police force said in a statement that eight of the dead were women and 31 were men.

“All are believed to be Chinese nationals,” Essex Police said.

China’s foreign ministry said its embassy staff in London were heading to the scene “to verify this situation”.

The grim discovery has drawn attention to the shadowy people traffickin­g business and efforts to stem the flow of illegal migrants to Britain.

Police also confirmed that officers had searched three properties in Northern Ireland overnight in connection with the investigat­ion.

The addresses are believed to be linked to the truck driver, a 25-year-old man from the province, who was arrested at the scene in Grays, east of London.

“We arrested a man on suspicion of murder, who remains in custody,” police said, adding that they were not identifyin­g him.

Police said a coroner would try to establish the cause of death of the 39 victims, before investigat­ors then attempt to identify each individual.

“This will be a substantia­l operation and, at this stage, we cannot estimate how long these procedures will take,” Essex Police said.

With the help of immigratio­n officials and the National Crime Agency (NCA), Essex Police are leading biggest murder probe in Britain since the 2005 terror attacks in London that killed 52 people.

Forensic investigat­ors could be seen working by the truck throughout a ll of Wednesday.

Police said it was later moved to a “secure location” at the nearby Tilbury docks “to give the utmost dignity to those within the trailer as we prepare for a coroner’s post-mortem examinatio­n”.

The container section came by ferry from the Belgian port of Zeebrugge into Purfleet on the River Thames estuary – a crossing that takes nine to 12 hours.

The vessel docked there at around 12:30am on Wednesday (11:30pm GMT Tuesday) and the truck left the port area about half an hour later.

Emergency services were then called to the Waterglade Industrial Park at around 1:40am.

Prosecutor­s in Belgium have launched their own probe and confirmed on Thursday that the container had passed through Zeebrugge, one of the world’s biggest and busiest ports, on Tuesday.

“It is not yet clear when the victims were placed in the container and whether this happened in Belgium,” the Belgian federal prosecutor’s office said.

It added that its investigat­ion “will focus on the organisers of and all other parties involved” and be carried out in close cooperatio­n with Britain.

Essex Police revealed the tractor unit of the truck entered Britain on Sunday on a ferry from Dublin to the Welsh port of Holyhead.

They had earlier said they believed the tractor originated in Northern Ireland.

The vehicle had licence plates issued in Bulgaria after it was registered there in 2017 by an Irish citizen, according to Prime Minister Boyko Borisov.

He said the unit had not entered Bulgarian territory since and there was “no connection with us”.

In another incident on Wednesday, police in Kent, a county in southeast England, said they had discovered nine people stowed away in the back of another truck, after stopping the vehicle on a motorway.

After precaution­ary medical checks, they were passed to immigratio­n officials.

The NCA said the number of migrants being smuggled into Britain in containers and trucks had risen in the last year.

In May, the agency warned there had been “increasing use of higher risk methods of clandestin­e entry” to Britain by organised immigratio­n crime gangs.

The latest deaths drew comparison­s to previous cases in Britain and continenta­l Europe.

In 2000, the bodies of 58 clandestin­e Chinese immigrants were discovered in a Dutch truck in the English port of Dover. Two people survived.

In August 2015, at the peak of Europe’s migration crisis, the bodies of 71 migrants including a baby girl were found piled up in the back of a poultry refrigerat­or lorry left in Austria.

 ?? BEN STANSALL/AFP VIA GETTY ?? British forensic officers work by a lorry found east of London on Wednesday carrying what police believe to be 39 dead Chinese nationals.
BEN STANSALL/AFP VIA GETTY British forensic officers work by a lorry found east of London on Wednesday carrying what police believe to be 39 dead Chinese nationals.

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