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Trial of 19 people accused of involvement in Vietnamese migrant lorry tragedy opens in Paris

The trial of 19 people accused of being involved in a people-smuggling operation the resulted in the death of 39 Vietnamese migrants, who suffocated to death in a refrigerated container near London, begins Tuesday in Paris.

Police at the scene where bodies were discovered in a lorry container, in Grays, Essex, Britain October 23, 2019.
Police at the scene where bodies were discovered in a lorry container, in Grays, Essex, Britain October 23, 2019. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls
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The bodies of the migrants – two of whom were just 15 years old – were discovered inside the sealed unit at a port near London in October 2019.

They had travelled in the lorry from northern France to Belgium before crossing the Channel to Britain.

The 19 defendants in the French trial include people of Vietnamese, French, Chinese, Algerian and Moroccan nationality.

Two ringleaders of the operation – one Romanian and one British – were convicted at a trial in Britain and sentenced to 27 and 20 years in prison respectively, in 2021.

Other suspects, notably the drivers, received 12 to 20 years, while a Belgian court handed a 15-year term to a Vietnamese man for heading the local cell of the network.

The defendants in the French trial face up to 10 years for involvement in a people-smuggling gang, while four are also charged with involuntary homicide.

According to phone intercepts, they referred to the migrants as "goods" or "chickens".

Harrowing accounts from victims

The defendants include taxi drivers and owners of apartments used to house migrants around Paris, some of whom have argued they were pressured by the smuggling gangs.

But prosecutors said in a statement to the court that the defendants were motivated by money.

Their statement said the case exposed the "risks these networks pose to foreigners seeking exile: the risk of death that awaits them by piling them up like animals in refrigerated trucks".

The French trial is scheduled to last until 10 November.

In the aftermath of the tragedy, harrowing accounts emerged from the victims, who had been able to contact their families from the lorry.

In a message sent from the container, 26-year-old Pham Thi Tra My wrote to her parents: "Mom, dad, I love you very much. I am dying, I can no longer breathe."

Another man left a recording, saying: "I want to come back to my family. Have a good life."

(with AFP)

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