Belgium, France arrest dozens over UK migrant truck deaths
Police in Brussels and Paris arrest 26 suspects over the deaths of 39 Vietnamese migrants in a truck last year.
Police in Belgium and France have arrested 26 suspected people smugglers over the death of 39 Vietnamese migrants in a refrigerated truck in the United Kingdom last year.
The migrants, 31 men and eight women, were found dead in the truck in an industrial zone east of London in October, sparking an international outcry.
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Vietnam arrests suspects over UK truck deaths
The driver of the truck has already admitted manslaughter over the deaths but Tuesday's arrests targeted the ring of smugglers suspected of organising the migrants' journey.
Police swooped in a series of raids around Brussels and Paris as part of a probe also involving British and Irish investigators.
In Belgium - where some of the victims stayed before their fateful journey - police held 13 people, including 11 Vietnamese nationals.
"The network set up by the smugglers is suspected of having likely transported up to several dozen people every day for several months," Belgian federal prosecutors said in a statement on Wednesday.
"The organisation focused on transporting refugees from Asia, particularly from Vietnam," the statement continued.
Prosecutors suspect the gang organised the transport of the Vietnamese migrants in the container where they died.
Most of those arrested in France are also Vietnamese, according to an investigation source, AFP news agency reported.
The probe has discovered that the migrants who died were loaded onto the truck in northern France, and that the network continued its operations even after the tragedy, charging 15,000 to 20,000 euros ($16,000-22,000) to cross from France to the UK.
Even the coronavirus lockdown could not stop the gang's smuggling activities, the source said.
The tragedy shone a spotlight on the extraordinary dangers migrants are willing to risk to reach the UK, with some paying smugglers up to $40,000 for the perilous journey.
Post-mortem tests found the victims died from lack of oxygen and overheating, and one sent a poignant text message to her family in Vietnam as she lay dying in the truck.
The victims came from poor rural areas of central Vietnam, a hotspot for people willing to embark on dangerous journeys in the hope of finding opportunities for economic prosperity abroad.
Many are smuggled illegally through Russia or China, often left owing huge sums to their traffickers and ending up working on cannabis farms or in nail salons.
The driver of the truck, Maurice Robinson of Northern Ireland, last month pleaded guilty to manslaughter over the 39 deaths.
Four other men are on trial in London over the deaths, while another man, Ronan Hughes, is facing extradition from Ireland to the UK on 39 counts of manslaughter and one of conspiracy to commit unlawful immigration.
Hughes is accused of organising and controlling the drivers in the trafficking operation.