The Phnom Penh Post

UK prosecutor­s hail latest conviction over deaths of VN migrants

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BRITISH prosecutor­s on March 22 hailed another conviction resulting from a years-long probe into a people smuggling operation that led to the deaths of 39 Vietnamese migrants in horrific conditions inside a lorry.

A British court sentenced Stefan Dragos Damian, a 28year-old Romanian citizen, to three years and ten months in prison on March 21 after he pleaded guilty to conspiracy to assist unlawful immigratio­n, they said.

“Another people smuggler has been jailed for his role which led to the death of 39 Vietnamese people in the back of a lorry,” the Crown Prosecutio­n Service (CPS), which handles prosecutio­ns in England and Wales, said after sentencing.

The ruling on March 21 follows a British judge last year handing down sentences of 27 and 20 years to the ringleader­s of the people smuggling operation, while two truck drivers were given 13year and 18-year sentences.

Authoritie­s in Belgium have also put 23 people suspected of involvemen­t on trial.

The victims – the youngest of whom were two 15-yearold boys – suffocated in the truck’s container as they were being transporte­d to what they had hoped would be new lives in Britain.

The lifeless bodies of the migrants were discovered inside the sealed unit at a port near London in October 2019.

The case cast a shocking new light on the lengths migrants will go to to reach Britain – and on the gangs exploiting their desperatio­n.

The CPS noted Damian was “brought to justice” through a multi-agency investigat­ion which involved the National Crime Agency, Essex police, the interior ministry and law enforcemen­t colleagues across Europe.

Italian police detained him last June in Milan on a UK arrest warrant and he was extradited last September.

The UK authoritie­s’ probe establishe­d he was part of a wider conspiracy to smuggle people illegally and had fled the country immediatel­y after the discovery of the dead 39 Vietnamese migrants.

“Dragos Damian was a key player in an evil people smuggling conspiracy that made money from misery,” Detective Chief Inspector Louise Metcalfe said in a statement.

She said she hoped the sentence will “serve as a warning to those who think it is acceptable to prey on the vulnerabil­ities of those who are seeking a different life for themselves and their families”.

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