Orlando Sentinel

Trucker arrested in England after 39 bodies found in semi

- By Gregory Katz and Alastair Grant

GRAYS, England — Authoritie­s found 39 people dead in a truck Wednesday in an industrial park in England and arrested the driver on suspicion of murder in one of Britain’s worst human-smuggling tragedies.

Police were reconstruc­ting the final journey of the victims as they tried to piece together where they were from and how they came to be in England.

“To put 39 people into a locked metal container shows a contempt for human life that is evil,” said Jackie Doyle-Price, a member of Parliament who represents the area where the truck was found. “The best thing we can do in memory of those victims is to find the perpetrato­rs and bring them to justice.”

The truck and the trailer with the people inside apparently took separate circuitous journeys before ending up on the grounds of the Waterglade Industrial Park in Grays, 25 miles east of London on the River Thames.

British police said they believe the container went from the port of Zeebrugge in Belgium to Purfleet, England, where it arrived early Wednesday.

Police believe the truck traveled from Northern Ireland to Dublin, where it took a ferry to Holyhead in Wales before picking up the trailer at the dockside in England.

The truck’s driver, a 25year-old man from Northern Ireland, was arrested on suspicion of murder. He has not been charged and his name has not been released.

The truck was registered in Bulgaria to a company owned by an Irish citizen, Bulgaria’s Foreign Ministry said. It’s point of origin was unclear.

The Belgian federal prosecutor’s office said it has opened an investigat­ion.

“We have no idea at the moment how long the lorry (truck) spent in Belgium,” spokesman Eric Van Duyse said.

A police motorcycle escort slowly led the Scania semitraile­r out of the park as darkness approached Wednesday, taking it to a place where the bodies could be recovered. The driver of the trailer wore a full forensic suit and gloves as he guided the vehicle in the impromptu cortège past journalist­s.

Britain remains an attractive destinatio­n for immigrants, even as the United Kingdom is negotiatin­g its divorce from the European Union.

In Parliament, Prime Minister Boris Johnson put aside the Brexit crisis and vowed that human trafficker­s would be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.

“All such traders in human beings should be hunted down and brought to justice,” he said.

The tragedy recalls the death of 58 migrants in 2000 in a truck in Dover, England, and the deaths in 2015 of 71 migrants from Syria, Iraq and Afghanista­n who were found suffocated in the back of a refrigerat­ed truck that was abandoned on an Austrian highway close to the Hungarian border.

Police also were investigat­ing a separate incident in which nine people were found traveling in the back of a truck in southeast England.

The National Crime Agency said its specialist­s were working to “urgently identify and take action against any organized crime groups who have played a role in causing these deaths.”

 ?? ALASTAIR GRANT/AP ?? Police escort the tractor-trailer Wednesday from an industrial park in southeaste­rn England. The 25-year-old driver was arrested on suspicion of murder in the smuggling case.
ALASTAIR GRANT/AP Police escort the tractor-trailer Wednesday from an industrial park in southeaste­rn England. The 25-year-old driver was arrested on suspicion of murder in the smuggling case.

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