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		Victims found dead in truck in UK were Chinese: ITV News
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		 [October 24, 2019] 
		By Alistair Smout and Michael Holden 
 LONDON (Reuters) - The 39 people found dead 
		in the back of a truck near London were Chinese, ITV News reported on 
		Thursday, as police questioned the driver of the vehicle who was 
		detained on suspicion of murder.
 
 Paramedics and police found the bodies of 38 adults and one teenager 
		early on Wednesday in a truck container on an industrial estate at 
		Grays, about 20 miles (32 km) east of the British capital.
 
 Police have not yet identified the victims but ITV reported that they 
		were all Chinese. Essex Police said they could not confirm the report 
		and there was no immediate comment from the Chinese foreign ministry or 
		from China's London embassy.
 
 Detectives were continuing to question the truck driver, a 25-year-old 
		man from Northern Ireland. A source familiar with the investigation said 
		he was Mo Robinson from Portadown in the British province and the BBC 
		reported that police had raided two houses in Northern Ireland as part 
		of the investigation.
 
		 
		For years, illegal immigrants have attempted to reach Britain stowed 
		away in the back of trucks, often seeking to reach the United Kingdom 
		from the European mainland.
 In Britain's biggest illegal immigrant tragedy, the bodies of 58 Chinese 
		people were found crammed into a tomato truck at the southern port of 
		Dover in 2000. The vehicle had begun its journey in Zeebrugge.
 
 In the latest incident, the container arrived at Purfleet docks in 
		Essex, southern England, having also traveled from the Belgian port of 
		Zeebrugge.
 
 The red cab unit was believed to have come from Ireland. It had 
		"Ireland" emblazoned on the windscreen along with the message "The 
		Ultimate Dream".
 
 The grim discovery of the bodies was made at 1.40 a.m. just over an hour 
		after the container arrived in Britain
 
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			Police move the lorry container where bodies were discovered, in 
			Grays, Essex, Britain October 23, 2019. REUTERS/Hannah McKay 
            
 
            "It is hard to put ourselves in the shoes of those emergency 
			services... as they were asked to open that container and to expose 
			the appalling crime that had taken place," Prime Minister Boris 
			Johnson said.
 The vehicle has been moved to a secure site at nearby Tilbury Docks 
			where the bodies can be recovered and further forensic work 
			undertaken to begin what police said would be the lengthy process of 
			identifying the victims.
 
 The National Crime Agency said it was assisting the investigation 
			and working to "urgently identify and take action against any 
			organized crime groups who have played a role in causing these 
			deaths."
 
 Shaun Sawyer, the national spokesman for British police on human 
			trafficking, said many thousands of people were seeking to come to 
			the United Kingdom. While they were able to rescue many of those 
			smuggled into the country, Britain was perceived by organized crime 
			as a potentially easy target for traffickers.
 
 "You can't turn the United Kingdom into a fortress. We have to 
			accept that we have permeable borders," he told BBC radio.
 
 (Writing by Michael Holden; editing by Guy Faulconbridge and David 
			Clarke)
 
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