British police believe migrants in truck trailer were Vietnamese
Fifth suspect arrested at Dublin port in connection with bodies
London — British authorities said Saturday that their investigation into the death of 39 suspected migrants discovered in a truck container in Essex was now focusing on the Vietnamese community after they initially thought the victims were Chinese.
Detective Chief Inspector Martin Pasmore told reporters that investigators were working on the assumption that the victims were Vietnamese nationals, but that “there may be other nationalities involved.”
He said he had met with the Vietnamese ambassador to Britain, Tran Ngoc An, and that authorities would share fingerprints with their Vietnamese counterparts in a bid to identify the dead.
All of the bodies have now been moved from the truck in Tilbury Docks to Broomfield Hospital in Chelmsford for post-mortem examinations.
Also on Saturday, a fifth suspect in the case was arrested at Dublin port and will appear before a judge later in the day, Britain’s PA news agency reported.
Four others, including a 48-yearold from Northern Ireland who was detained at Stansted Airport on Friday on suspicion of conspiracy to traffic people and manslaughter, remain in custody.
Several Vietnamese families said Saturday that they feared their relatives could be among the victims.
Bui Huy Cuong, deputy chairman of the Can Loc District People’s Committee in Ha Tinh Province told dpa he had received information about eight missing people.
“Five families have reported to us and asked for help” in finding their missing children, he said.
According to local newspaper VnExpress, as many as 12 families in central Vietnam have reported their children missing since Oct. 23.
Nguyen Dinh Gia, 57, told dpa that his son had migrated to Europe in 2017 and had informed him that he was being smuggled from France to Britain as part of a group of migrants earlier this week.