Ho Chi Minh/London: The driver of the refrigerated truck in which 39 people were found dead earlier this week has been charged with manslaughter, police in the UK said Saturday. Maurice “Mo” Robinson, a 25-year-old resident of Northern Ireland, has been in custody since the bodies of 31 men and eight women were discovered Wednesday in Grays, a town in the English county of Essex, the Efe news reported.
Robinson “is due to appear at Chelmsford Magistrates’ Court on Monday 28 October charged with 39 counts of manslaughter, conspiracy to traffic people, conspiracy to assist unlawful immigration and money laundering,” Essex Police said in a statement. “Three other people have been arrested in connection with this investigation,” the department said, identifying those suspects as a man and a woman, both 38, from Warrington, England, and a 48-year-old man from Northern Ireland.
Meanwhile, police in the Republic of Ireland on Saturday said they had arrested a man in connection with the investigation at Dublin Port. Police described him as a man in his 20s from Northern Ireland. Authorities in Vietnam have raised concerns that at least two Vietnamese nationals were among the victims. Essex Police originally hypothesized that all 39 victims were Chinese. Two families in Vietnam have come forward, saying they feared that Pham Thi Tra My and Nguyen Dinh Luong, both from the central town of Thanh Loc, were among those traveling in the refrigerated container, according to Thanh Mien newspaper. The family of Tra My, 26, released screenshots of what they say was her final message to her mother. “My journey abroad has not succeeded. Mum, I love you so much! I’m dying because I can’t breathe,” the message read.
Vietnam’s ambassador to the UK, Tran Ngoc An, traveled to Grays on Saturday to meet with police and local officials, the British press reported. (IANS)