Portsmouth News

Members of people-smuggling gang using city’s port jailed

- Fiona Callingham fiona.callingham@thenews.co.uk

A GROUP of five men who smuggled 35 Afghan people into the UK in purpose built wardrobe ‘hides’ inside vans through ports including Portsmouth, have been jailed for a total of 24 years and two months.

Following a trial at Reading Crown Court the court heard that between August and October 2019, Paramjeet Singh Baweja, 50, and Viljit Singh Khurana, 45, organised the smuggling of 35 migrants into the country through six separate events.

Individual­s were screwed into purpose-built hides made from wardrobes, which were surrounded by furniture items in the rear of the vans. The vans were driven through Europe to Southern UK ports, including Portsmouth and Dover.

The coffin-like hides, from which the migrants had no way of escaping without the assistance of the organised crime group, were used to conceal up to seven people each journey.

Many were only discovered after they had endured travel from Belgium and France, through the ports and across the Channel. One group were discovered while shouting for their lives at the point of being loaded onto a recovery vehicle.

Following a two-year investigat­ion by Home Office, Baweja and Khurana pleaded guilty to the purchasing of vans and furniture, communicat­ing between the ‘minders’, the migrants and Romanian drivers and paying money to the ‘minders’. Baweja was sentenced to six years and nine months imprisonme­nt. Khurana received a sixyear sentence.

Minister for Justice and

Tackling Illegal Migration, Tom Pursglove MP said: ‘These life-threatenin­g attempts to smuggle people, including very young children, into the UK in the back of vehicles with room to barely move or breathe, is quite frankly, horrific.

‘I would like to praise the officers on the case in their efforts working round the clock to prevent this illegal activity which put people’s lives in extreme danger.

‘The Nationalit­y and Borders Act will support our criminal investigat­ions teams by making it easier to prosecute people smugglers and introducin­g a maximum sentence of life imprisonme­nt for those who facilitate illegal entry into our country.’

The ‘minders’ were found to be Harmohan Singh, 41, and Manmohan Singh Wadhwa, 57. Both admitted to escorting the vans and drivers during the facilitati­on events and providing progress updates to other members of the crime group and drivers. Both Singh and Wadhwa were sentenced to three years and four months years in jail.

Forensic evidence indicated that Harmohan Singh was also involved in the screwing of the migrants into the hides in the wardrobes.

The final individual sentenced was Dumitru Bacelan, 29, a Romanian national, believed to be of higher ‘rank’ than the minders and drivers. Bacelan pleaded guilty to his part of the recruitmen­t and the organising of drivers. This included booking hotels and travel around the UK and Europe. He also pleaded guilty to fraud by false representa­tion in relation to an EUSS applicatio­n he submitted to the Home Office. He has been sentenced to three years and nine months imprisonme­nt for immigratio­n offences, and 12 months for fraud offences to run concurrent­ly.

 ?? ?? Top, from left: Manmohan Singh Wadhwa, Harmohan Singh, Viljit Singh Khurana; Bottom: Paramjeet Singh Baweja, Dumitru Bacelan
Top, from left: Manmohan Singh Wadhwa, Harmohan Singh, Viljit Singh Khurana; Bottom: Paramjeet Singh Baweja, Dumitru Bacelan

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