The Guardian (USA)

Essex lorry deaths: police say all victims thought to be Vietnamese

- Rory Carroll Ireland correspond­ent and Aaron Walawalkar

Police believe they have now identified some of the 39 migrants found dead in a refrigerat­ed lorry container near London, with all victims thought to be from Vietnam.

Essex police said on Friday that the identities could not be announced until confirmato­ry evidence is gathered from a number of different countries and formally presented to the HM senior coroner for considerat­ion.

Tim Smith, the assistant chief constable, said: “At this time, we believe the victims are Vietnamese nationals, and we are in contact with the Vietnamese government.

“We are in direct contact with a number of families in Vietnam and the UK, and we believe we have identified families for some of the victims whose journey ended in tragedy on our shores.”

The news came hours after a man from Northern Ireland was charged with multiple counts of manslaught­er.

Eamonn Harrison, 22, appeared in court in Dublin on Friday to face 41 charges, including 39 manslaught­er charges, conspiracy to commit human traffickin­g and conspiracy to assist unlawful immigratio­n, after the endorsemen­t of a European arrest warrant.

UK authoritie­s suspect he delivered the trailer to the Belgian port of Zeebrugge before its onward journey to England.

CCTV taken at a truck stop in Veurne, Belgium, showed Harrison to be the driver of the lorry that later deposited the trailer at Zeebrugge, DS Jim Kirwan of the garda’s extraditio­n unit told the court.

Harrison, from Mayobridge in County Down, will face an extraditio­n hearing later this month. He was arrested at Dublin port last Saturday after taking a ferry from France.

He is the second person to be charged in relation to the tragedy. Maurice “Mo” Robinson, 25, another Northern Ireland haulier who collected the trailer from Purfleet in Essex, was charged on Monday with similar offences.

The news came as police in Vietnam arrested two people on Friday on suspicion of involvemen­t in the deaths. Ha Tinh police also summoned others for questionin­g as part of an investigat­ion into human traffickin­g.

Essex police, earlier on Friday, appealed to two Irish brothers wanted in connection with the deaths to turn themselves in.

DCI Daniel Stoten told a press conference in Belfast that Ronan and Christophe­r Hughes should come forward to face questionin­g over suspected manslaught­er and people traffickin­g.

Stoten also confirmed that police recently spoke by phone with Ronan Hughes but that his whereabout­s were not known since the victims’ bodies were discovered in the back of a lorry in Essex on 23 October.

“Today I want to make a direct appeal: Ronan and Christophe­r, hand yourselves in to the Police Service of Northern Ireland. We need you both to come forward and assist this investigat­ion,” he said.

“Although we have already spoken to Ronan Hughes recently by telephone we need to have a conversati­on with him and his brother in person. Talking to Ronan and Christophe­r is crucial to our investigat­ion and the sooner we can make this happen the sooner we can progress and continue with our investigat­ion.”

Ronan, 40, and Christophe­r, 34, are believed to be originally from County Monaghan, in the Republic of Ireland, and to run a haulage business that straddles the border with County Armagh in Northern Ireland.

Five other people from the island of Ireland have been arrested in connection with the tragedy.

Robinson, 25, who drove the lorry container in which the eight women and 31 men were found, was charged on Monday with 39 counts of manslaught­er, conspiracy to traffic people, conspiracy to assist unlawful immigratio­n, and money laundering. Prosecutor­s allege he was part of a global ring of trafficker­s.

Ronan Hughes rented the lorry container and is believed to have hired Robinson to collect it from Purfleet, where it arrived on a ferry from Zeebrugge.

Earlier this week, it was reported that Hughes phoned police soon after the discovery of the bodies and said Robinson was unaware of the clandestin­e human cargo.

Stoten told the press conference that on Thursday police had seized a lorry connected to the Hughes brothers, adding that they had links to haulage and shipping industries.

He urged anyone with informatio­n about them to come forward. “It is essential we follow all lines of inquiry and bring those responsibl­e for these tragic events to justice.”

Last week, residents in the Hughes’s neighbourh­ood who identified themselves as relatives said the brothers were not at home and declined to comment.

 ??  ?? The bodies of 39 people being transporte­d under police escort by private ambulance from the Port of Tilbury to Broomfield Hospital in Chelmsford last Friday. Photograph: Kirsty O’Connor/PA
The bodies of 39 people being transporte­d under police escort by private ambulance from the Port of Tilbury to Broomfield Hospital in Chelmsford last Friday. Photograph: Kirsty O’Connor/PA
 ??  ?? DCI Daniel Stoten of Essex police at the press conference in Belfast. Photograph: David Young/PA
DCI Daniel Stoten of Essex police at the press conference in Belfast. Photograph: David Young/PA

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