Sihai network

6 dead trucks in Vietnam 39 dead trucks are all Vietnamese

Minus 25 degrees container, 39 bodies & hellip& hellip; British police are conducting an intense investigation into the 'frozen truck' case.

The identity of the deceased has become one of the most concerned and confusing issues. From 'all Chinese', to 'nationality has not been confirmed', and then to the latest 'more than Vietnamese', compared with the continuous digging of materials by the media, the police remained silent on the news and called on not to speculate on the nationality of the victims.

However, with the continuous development of the case, several Vietnamese families began to stand up and look for their missing relatives. The BBC interviewed several Vietnamese families whose "relatives disappeared on the way to Britain" and got a lot of details. For example, the "organizer" did not allow these people to answer the phone, and some families had received the money returned by human traffickers.

26 year old girl's last message

Pham thi tra my, a 26 year old girl in Vietnam, was the first to receive attention. Her family suspected that she was killed in the van.

In an interview with the BBC, Pham's brother Pham Ngoc Tuan said that the cost of her sister's smuggling from Vietnam to the UK was 30000 pounds, some of which had been given to human traffickers, and what they knew was that Pham's last location was Belgium. An acquaintance of the Pham family confirmed to the guardian that their family had to mortgage their house in order to pay the money.

'on October 23, my sister disappeared on the way from Vietnam to Britain. We couldn't reach her. We were worried that she might be in that car. We asked the British police to assist in the investigation so that my sister can go back to her family. "

Pham's last message to his family has also become the focus of attention, full of despair and struggle.