Police are today continuing their investigations after 39 dead bodies were found inside a refridgerated lorry in the early hours of yesterday morning.
Here is how the story has played out:
- Essex Police received reports of a number of people discovered inside a lorry container at 1.40am on Wednesday.
- The lorry was found at Waterglade Industrial Park on Eastern Avenue in Grays, Thurrock, in Essex.
- Ambulance staff found all 39 victims, including a teenager, dead inside the container.
- A murder investigation was launched and the lorry driver, a 25-year-old man from Northern Ireland, was arrested on suspicion of murder and is in police custody.
- The lorry driver has been named in reports as Mo Robinson from Portadown in Co Armagh.
- Police have yet to identify the lorry victims or where they are from, saying that this could be a "lengthy process".
- The lorry trailer is believed to have travelled from Zeebrugge in Belgium to Purfleet and docked in the Thurrock area shortly after 12:30am on Wednesday.
- A freight ferry service runs from Zeebrugge to Purfleet.
- The tractor unit front section of the lorry is believed to have originated in Northern Ireland.
- Police believe the tractor unit and trailer left the port in Thurrock shortly after 1.05am
- It was originally thought that the lorry entered the country through Holyhead in north Wales on Saturday.
- The Bulgarian Ministry of Foreign Affairs said the Scania lorry was registered in Varna, a city on the east coast of the country, under the name of a company owned by an Irish citizen.
- The ministry added that police said it is "highly unlikely" the victims are Bulgarians.
- A road haulage expert said the lorry container appeared to be a refrigerated unit, with temperatures inside able to drop as low as -25C.
- A cordon was erected at the industrial site in Grays while police conducted their investigations.
- A casualty bureau was also set up by police for people to call if they are concerned about relatives who may be involved in the incident.
- The lorry was later moved under police escort from the industrial park to a secure location at Tilbury Docks.
- Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he was "appalled" by the incident and said the perpetrators of the crime "should be hunted down and brought to justice".
- Officers from the Essex Police, the National Crime Agency and Immigration Enforcement are all working on the case.
- The Police Service of Northern Ireland said it was supporting the Essex Police investigation, while the Irish police, An Garda Siochana, said they would "provide every assistance possible".
- The incident is not the worst of its kind in the UK. The bodies of 58 Chinese people were found in a container at Dover, Kent, in 2000.
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