The driver accused of killing 39 people mistakenly found in his truck appeared for the first time in court in Britain. Morris Robinson appeared before the Chilmsford Magistrate Court via video link from the prison yesterday, while sad details emerged about the victims, a group of illegal immigrants. From East Asia, they were victims of a gang involved in smuggling illegal immigrants to Britain.

The 25-year-old will remain in detention until he appears before a high court on November 25, where he is expected to petition.

Morrison faces 39 counts of manslaughter and two counts of conspiracy to facilitate human trafficking and other crimes. Robinson's lawyer did not ask for bail.

On Friday, British police arrested three new people after 39 bodies were found frozen in a truck near London and its driver arrested.

The bodies were taken to Bromfield Hospital in Clemford for autopsy, and police are believed to have begun examining the victims' belongings to identify them. A police spokesman said the initial belief was that the victims were all Chinese, but it later turned out that most of them were from Vietnam.

Police reports showed that the victims were naked or semi-naked, some covered with white fluff, while the inspectors found bloody traces on the walls of the container, which the police believed were caused by the victims' continued roads on the walls for help.

Police and investigators identified seven victims, all from Vietnam, believed to have been on their way to the United Kingdom to work in beauty salons. Relatives of the victims explained that people belonging to migrant smuggling groups were visiting them in Vietnam frequently, to try to persuade them to make an illegal immigration decision and pay Fees, with a promise to refund the amount paid if the transaction is not successful.

As news of the unfortunate incident spread around the world, Britain received many letters from families in Vietnam, containing names and pictures of young men and women, who had left their country to try to enter Britain illegally, and parents believe that they may be among the victims of the truck.

Among the victims identified by the police was the 19-year-old Anna Boithi Inhong, who was seen off by her parents living in a small village last August. They hope to have a happy and successful life in Britain, before they receive a letter from a friend in Britain, telling them that their poor daughter was one of the frozen bodies found by police in the truck, CNN reported.

Inhong's family paid more than $ 10,000 to a gang representative who visited them in their small village, hoping that their beautiful and talented daughter could succeed in her beauty salon work and send some money to them, so they could build a bigger and better home.

A few days before the bodies were discovered in the truck, Inhong posted on Facebook a leaflet saying, “Being an adult means you have to hide your grief in the dark and keep a smile on your face.” "Inhong" smiling in a green field, weeks after leaving the Philippines, wrote under the picture: "All I want is a quiet life."

Pham Thi Tramay is another girl who was among the victims. Her parents paid more than £ 30,000 so that their daughter could enter Britain and work there. They even had to mortgage their only home, but the last message they received from their daughter was while she was dying. To her family she feels very cold and can not breathe, that she is near her death, and that she loves them all.

In addition to Inhong and Termay, there are five more corpses that investigators have identified, all for victims whose families or husbands have paid a lot of money. But it seems that all the parents will get is the bodies of their children, and sad memories that are unforgettable, for the last messages they sent during the dying.

Among the victims, Nguyen Dinh Tu, 26, a former soldier who left his wife and young son, a few months ago asked his wife Huang Thi Thong to help him raise 11,000 pounds ($ 14,000) to cover the cost of an illegal trip from Germany to the UK.

Huang revealed that her husband was working illegally in Romania and Germany and begged her to get money to reach the UK.
"I lost contact with him on October 21. I have a big debt that I have to pay, no hope, no energy to do anything," Huang said in tears.