Los Angeles Times

More arrests after 39 Vietnamese die in truck in Britain

Eight additional suspects in people smuggling are held in victims’ homeland.

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

HANOI — Vietnamese police have arrested eight more suspects in connection with the deaths of 39 Vietnamese people who were found dead inside a refrigerat­ed truck trailer in southeaste­rn England.

Police said the eight were arrested Sunday on charges of organizing smuggling people overseas as the sprawling internatio­nal investigat­ion into the tragedy continues.

British police said Friday that all 39 victims were Vietnamese nationals. They initially said the victims discovered near the southeaste­rn port of Purfleet on Oct. 23 were from China, but families from Vietnam have contacted authoritie­s there with concerns for missing relatives.

British police have charged 25-year-old Maurice Robinson, from Northern Ireland, with 39 counts of manslaught­er and conspiracy to traffic people. They say he drove the cab of the truck to Purfleet, where it picked up the container, which had arrived by ferry from Zeebrugge in Belgium.

Another man was arrested Friday in Ireland, and two others in Vietnam.

British authoritie­s charged with trying to identify the remains are working with officials in Vietnam to try to get informatio­n about people who have been reported missing by their families and are thought to have been in transit to England.

According to Vietnam’s state-run Thanh Nien newspaper, Vietnam has sent another delegation with officials from the Ministry of Public Security and the Foreign Ministry to Britain to work with authoritie­s there on the case.

“The government is trying to repatriate bodies of the victims as fast as possible according to Vietnamese, British and internatio­nal laws,” Gen. To Lam, Vietnam’s minister of public security, was quoted as saying by the newspaper.

The victims — 31 men and eight women — are believed to have paid trafficker­s for their clandestin­e transit into England. Police have not provided details about the scheme.

Over the weekend, London’s Vietnamese community gathered at a vigil and a service to honor the victims.

The Rev. Simon Nguyen offered prayers for the victims and for their loved ones in Vietnam.

“We show our condolence­s and sympathies for the people who have lost their lives on the way seeking freedom, dignity and happiness,” he said, going on to pray for those who lost their “sons and daughters” in the tragedy.

A Saturday night vigil was followed by a Sunday service at the Church of the Holy Name and Our Lady of the Sacred Heart in East London.

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