Irish Independent

Lorry driver ‘blind to risks’ of smuggling as Vietnamese migrants suffocated in trailer

- Emily Pennink

A LORRY driver who found the bodies of 39 migrants in the back of his trailer had been “blind to the risks” of people smuggling, an English court has heard.

The Vietnamese victims, aged between 15 and 44, had suffocated in the sealed container as it was shipped from Zeebrugge to Purfleet in Essex in October 2019.

Maurice Robinson (26) was left in shock after he opened the doors and found they were all dead, the Old Bailey in London was told.

His boss and ringleader in the operation Ronan Hughes (41) had told him to give them air quickly after collecting the trailer from the docks.

Robinson, who had called Hughes before 999, replied: “I can’t, they are f*****g dead.”

Robinson, of Craigavon, and Hughes, of Armagh, had pleaded guilty to the manslaught­ers and a plot to people smuggle dating back to May 2018.

Robinson, who took cash to Northern Ireland for Hughes, had also admitted a money laundering offence. They were appearing to be sentenced with six other defendants.

In mitigation, Tyrone Smith

QC accepted Robinson had misled authoritie­s by failing to say Hughes had sent him a message instructin­g him to “give them air quickly don’t let them out” before he found the bodies.

Mr Smith said Robinson had been “brave” in giving full details to police afterwards which not only incriminat­ed himself but others.

Robinson had been a “hard working and well liked young man” whose involvemen­t had shocked those who knew him.

Mr Smith said: “We do not seek to blame anybody else.

“He was blind to the risks we can now say were obvious and should have been obvious to him. It has taken these awful events for the defendant to reflect properly on what he has done.

“If only he had stopped and thought in advance but perhaps for his own reasons he blinded himself to the obvious risks. He is horrified by what he saw. He was horrified by his role in bringing about these deaths.”

Coming from a small community, his actions had brought a “stain” on his own family and at the time of the deaths his partner had been pregnant.

Tim Moloney QC, for

Hughes, said: “The defendant did not intend any harm to migrants. It was not obvious to him the actions created the risk of death or serious harm.

“Hughes is clear, prior to the Clementine (ship) setting off, he did not know there were close to 40 migrants in the container.

“He does not say if he had known there were 39 he would have refused to continue.”

If he had known earlier he would still have carried on with the enterprise, but Mr Moloney added: “That’s not because he did not care less what happened to the migrants.”

Eamonn Harrison (24), from Co Down, had transporte­d the migrants to Zeebrugge on the fateful journey and was found guilty of smuggling and the manslaught­ers.

His lawyer Alisdair Williamson QC said he was an “inadequate young man” with ADHD but not “cynical or greedy”.

Rather, he was working for Hughes to pay off his debt after crashing one of his trucks while drunk.

Mr Justice Sweeney is expected to pass sentence on the defendants on a later date.

The maximum sentence for manslaught­er in England is life in prison.

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