Arkansas Online

In Belgium, smuggler guilty in 39 deaths

MONIKA PRONCZUK

BRUSSELS — A court in Belgium found a Vietnamese man guilty of people smuggling, alongside more than a dozen associates, in connection with the deaths of 39 Vietnamese migrants whose bodies were discovered in a truck in Britain, the court’s spokesman said in a statement Wednesday.

The verdict comes more than two years after the dead were found in a refrigerated truck near a ferry terminal in Essex, east of London. The migrants had crossed the English Channel from the Belgian port of Zeebrugge, which smuggling gangs have used as an entry point into Britain for decades.

The 45-year-old man, whose name was not made public, was sentenced to 15 years in prison and a fine of around $1 million, by a court in Bruges. The court confiscated assets from him worth more than $2.3 million.

“He is indisputably the leader of the Belgian cell of the criminal organization,” the court said in a statement. “His transports were life-threatening. He also organized the fatal transport of Oct. 22, 2019.”

Eric Van Duyse, a spokesman for the federal prosecutor, said the 22 others tried alongside the man were from Belgium, Morocco, Armenia and Vietnam.

Four, who had worked as drivers, were acquitted for “not being aware of the nature of the transports,” and one had already been convicted on similar charges in 2019. Seventeen others were found guilty and given sentences ranging from one to 10 years in prison.

“The most important is for the families of the victims to consider that they obtained justice.”

The discovery of the 39 bodies prompted the creation of a joint investigation team between Belgium, Ireland, France, Britain and two European Union agencies — Eurojust and Europol — which led to the arrests of 26 suspects in Belgium and France in May 2020.

Last January, a British court gave four men, including two truck drivers, prison sentences ranging from 13 to 27 years for manslaughter over the deaths, with the presiding judge noting that the people trapped in the truck would have died in an “excruciatingly painful” way. Another three men received prison sentences from three to seven years for conspiracy to facilitate illegal immigration.

The court in Belgium said that the people convicted on Tuesday were a part of a larger network smuggling people from Vietnam to Britain.

According to British authorities, Vietnam is one of the main sources of migrants who have been trafficked into the country, often to work in nail salons or factories, where they face abuse and exploitation. Vietnamese smugglers usually transport their clients from Vietnam through China into France or the Netherlands, where other gangs take over and get migrants across to Britain.

International

en-us

2022-01-20T08:00:00.0000000Z

2022-01-20T08:00:00.0000000Z

https://edition.arkansasonline.com/article/281878711747056

WEHCO Media