20 dead migrants found in truck in Austria
Austrian police on Thursday discovered the decomposing
bodies of at least 20 — and possibly up to 50 — migrants stacked in a truck
parked on the shoulder of the main highway from Budapest to Vienna.
The shocking find came as Austria hosted a summit in Vienna
on Europe's refugee crisis for Western Balkan nations, which have been
overwhelmed this year by the tens of thousands of migrants trying to get into
Europe via their territory, reports AP.
Police ordered reporters at the scene 25 miles (40
kilometers) southeast of Vienna to move away from the vehicle, a white
refrigeration truck with pictures of chicken on it. The truck, with all the
bodies still inside, was later taken away to a secure location so forensic
experts could examine it more thoroughly.
The state of the bodies on a hot summer day made
establishing the identities and even the exact number of dead migrants
difficult, and police opted to start that work once the truck was towed from the
highway. Asked how many bodies were in the vehicles, Hans Peter Doskozil, chief
of Burgenland provincial police, said "20, 30, 40 — maybe up to 50."
Doskozil told reporters in Eisenstadt, the provincial capital, that information
provided by Hungarian police indicates that the truck was somewhere east of
Budapest early Wednesday, and drove into Austria later in the day before being
abandoned. Some of the bodies are badly decomposed, the others less so, but
their state indicates that they may have died before the vehicle entered
Austria, he said.
The truck was now in a hall near the border where
"cooling possibilities" were available, and police would open the
vehicle this evening once temperatures were low enough to begin that work, said
Doskozil. Removing the bodies and work on trying to identify them would likely
last all night before the corpses were taken to Vienna for autopsies, he said.
Police spokesman Helmut Marban said police stopped shortly
before noon Thursday thinking that the parked truck had some mechanical
trouble. Then they "saw blood dripping" from the vehicle and
"noticed the smell of dead bodies," he said.
The truck had Hungarian license plates but the writing on
its side and back was in Slovak.
Police declined to give further information on the victims'
possible identities, whether children were among them, how the migrants may
have died or other details, and state prosecutor Johann Fuchs said that
"we cannot speculate how long it will take to determine what the refugees
died of" until the autopsies were done.
Austrian Cardinal Christoph Schoenborn said a memorial Mass
would be held Monday evening for the victims at Vienna's historic St. Stephen's
Cathedral. All Catholic churches in the city planned to ring their bells during
the service. At the Vienna migration summit on Thursday, participants held a
moment of silence and condemned the traffickers.
"Human smugglers are criminals," said Austrian
Foreign Minister Johanna Mikl-Leitner. "Those who still think that they
are gentle helpers of refugees are beyond saving."
Austrian Chancellor Werner Faymann said the deadly tragedy
showed how critical it was for nations to work together on solutions to the
influx of migrants.
"Today refugees lost the lives they had tried to save
by escaping, but lost them in the hand of traffickers," he told reporters.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who was also at the summit,
said she was "shaken by the awful news."
"This reminds us that we in Europe need to tackle the
problem quickly and find solutions in the spirit of solidarity," she said.
The truck apparently used to belong to the Slovak chicken
meat company Hyza, part of the Agrofert Holding, which is owned by Czech
Finance Minister Andrej Babis.
Agrofert Holding, in a statement, said they had sold the
truck in 2014. The new owners did not remove the truck's logos as required and
Hyza had nothing to do with the truck now, the company said. On one side of the
truck was the slogan "Honest chicken," while writing on the back read
"I taste so good because they feed me so well."
The Hungarian government said the truck's license number
plates were registered by a Romanian citizen in the central city of Kecskemet.
Migrants fleeing war and poverty from the Middle East,
Africa and Asia are flocking to Europe by the hundreds of thousands this year.
Many follow the Balkans route, from Turkey to Greece by sea,
up north to Macedonia by bus or foot, by train through Serbia and then walking
the last few miles into EU member Hungary. That avoids the more dangerous
Mediterranean Sea route from North Africa to Italy, where the bodies of 51
other migrants were found Wednesday in the hull of a smugglers' boat rescued
off Libya's northern coast.
Once inside the 28-nation EU, most migrants seek to reach
richer nations such as Germany, The Netherlands, Austria or Sweden.
Hungarian police said they detained 3,241 migrants on
Wednesday, over 700 more than a day earlier and the highest number so far this
year. The Hungarian government is quickly finishing a razor-wire border fence
to keep the migrants from crossing in from Serbia.
Amnesty International alleged that EU indecisiveness was
partly to blame for the latest migrant tragedy.
"People dying in their dozens — whether crammed into a
truck or a ship — en route to seek safety or better lives is a tragic
indictment of Europe's failures to provide alternative routes," the rights
group said a statement. "Europe has to step up and provide protection to
more, share responsibility better and show solidarity to other countries and to
those most in need."
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