Kuwait Times

Vietnam police take DNA from relatives of UK’s truck victims

Churches in northern Vietnam hold candle-lit prayers

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CAN LOC: Police in Vietnam took hair and blood samples yesterday to get DNA from relatives of people feared to be among the 39 who died in the back of a truck near London last week, their family members said. The bodies were found on Wednesday in a truck container in Grays, about 32 km east of central London and British police are still trying to establish the identity of victims who in many cases lacked identity documents.

In a poor rice-growing area of northern Vietnam, communitie­s have been plunged into mourning with their hope all but lost for relatives who had set out to seek better lives in Europe and were thought to have been aboard the truck. The hashtag #RIP39 was trending in Vietnam on widely-used Facebook. Distraught, Nguyen Dinh Gia said he feared there was very little chance he would ever again see his 20-year-old son, Nguyen Dinh Luong, who had been trying to get to Britain after first making it to France.

“Police from the Ministry of Public Security came to get DNA samples, our hair and blood,” Nguyen Dinh Gia told Reuters at Can Loc in Ha Tinh province, where sympathize­rs gathered at the simple house amid lush rice fields to console the family. “I advised him not to go because I told him that even though our family had always had nothing and our children were always in hardship, but we brought them up just fine,” Nguyen said. The father of Pham Thi Tra My, who sent a last text message to her family in the early hours of Wednesday Vietnam time, said police had also been to collect samples of blood and hair.

Vietnam’s government did not respond immediatel­y for a request for comment. Vietnam’s prime minister has called for an investigat­ion into the case. Police in Britain said on Saturday they had charged one man, 25-yearold Maurice Robinson of Craigavon in Northern Ireland, with 39 counts of manslaught­er and other offences including conspiracy to traffic people.

Yesterday, police said three people arrested in connection with the investigat­ion had been released on bail. All three had been questioned on suspicion of manslaught­er and conspiracy to traffic people. Initially, British police believed the victims were Chinese, but later sought help from the Vietnamese community. Chinese and Vietnamese officials were both working closely with British police, the countries’ embassies said. A Catholic priest in the remote town of Yen Thanh in Nghe An province said on Saturday that he believed most of the dead were likely from Vietnam.

No documents

British police have said very few of the victims were carrying official identifica­tion and that they hope to identify the dead through fingerprin­ts, dental records and DNA, as well as photos from friends and relatives. In the predominan­tly Catholic area of northern Vietnam from which the suspected victims came, churches held candle-lit prayers at the weekend. How the victims came to be in the truck is not yet known. Some 70% of Vietnamese traffickin­g cases in the United Kingdom between 2009-2016 were for labor exploitati­on, including cannabis production and work in nail salons, according to a British government report last year.

The families of the suspected victims were in Nghe An and Ha Tinh, two of the poorest provinces in communist Vietnam. Nghe An was identified as home to many victims of human traffickin­g who end up in Europe, according to a March report by the Pacific Links Foundation, a US-based anti-traffickin­g organizati­on. Ha Tinh was ravaged by one of Vietnam’s worst environmen­tal disasters in 2016 when a steel mill owned by Taiwan’s Formosa Plastics contaminat­ed coastal waters, devastatin­g local fishing and tourism industries.

It was from Ha Tinh that Tra My set out, first to China, in the hope of making it to Britain via France. According to Human Rights Space, a civic network based in Vietnam, she sent one final apologetic message home. “I’m sorry, mum and dad. My path abroad was not a success. I love you both so much. I can’t breathe. I’m from Nghen Town, Can Loc District, Ha Tinh, Vietnam ... I am sorry, mum,” the message said. —Reuters

 ??  ?? NGHE AN: Le Minh Tuan, father of 30-year old Le Van Ha, who is feared to be among the 39 people found dead in a truck in Britain, cries while holding Ha’s son outside their house in Vietnam’s Nghe An province yesterday. —AFP
NGHE AN: Le Minh Tuan, father of 30-year old Le Van Ha, who is feared to be among the 39 people found dead in a truck in Britain, cries while holding Ha’s son outside their house in Vietnam’s Nghe An province yesterday. —AFP

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