The National - News

Vietnam collects DNA from ‘relatives’ of 39 found dead in UK lorry

- THE NATIONAL

Three people arrested over the deaths of 39 people in the back of a container lorry near London have been released on bail as police try to establish the identities of the victims through the DNA of relatives.

Police in Vietnam took hair and blood samples from suspected relatives as efforts focused on some of the country’s poorest provinces.

Vietnam supplies some of the highest numbers of trafficked workers to the UK.

Nguyen Dinh Gia said he feared there was very little chance he would ever again see his 20-year-old son, Nguyen Dinh Luong, who had been trying to get to Britain after first making it to France.

“Police from the Ministry of Public Security came to get DNA samples, our hair and blood,” he told Reuters at Can Loc in Ha Tinh province, where mourners gathered at the simple house amid rice fields to console the family.

The driver of the lorry, Maurice Robinson, 25, from Craigavon in Northern Ireland, has been charged with 39 counts of manslaught­er and other traffickin­g-related offences and is due to appear in court today.

The three people released yesterday, two men and a woman, will have to report back to police next month. Irish officers said another man was arrested on Saturday.

Investigat­ors are also trying to establish if the lorry was part of a larger convoy carrying about 100 people.

The bodies were found on Wednesday at Grays, about 30 kilometres east of London.

Police said that the victims all appeared to have had bags and officers collected mobile phones and other material to try to identify them.

Police had said initially that the victims were believed to be Chinese but the alert was raised by rights workers that many were from Vietnam.

Vietnam’s VNExpress website said that 24 families had reported missing relatives.

One family received a farewell message from their daughter, Pham Tra My, 26, via text.

“I am really, really sorry, Mum and Dad, my trip to a foreign land has failed,” she wrote.

“I am dying, I can’t breathe.”

Vietnam’s VNExpress website said that 24 families reported missing relatives, with one family receiving a farewell text

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