Irish court orders extradition of suspect in UK migrant truck tragedy
Published : 13 Jun 2020, 00:13
The High Court in Dublin on Friday ordered the extradition of an Irish national wanted by UK police for his alleged involvement in the deaths of 39 Vietnamese migrants in Britain last year, reported Xinhua quoting the Irish national radio and television broadcaster RTE reported.
The person to be extradited is 40-year-old Ronan Hughes, who lives in Ireland's northern County Monaghan. Hughes was the owner of a truck used in smuggling the 39 Vietnamese migrants into the UK from Belgium last October. All the migrants were later found dead in the truck's refrigerated container parked at an industrial estate in Essex, UK.
UK police charged Hughes with multiple counts of manslaughter and illegal smuggling of people into Britain and sought his extradition from Ireland.
Hughes was arrested by Irish police in April and has since remained in the police custody without a bail. He had tried to appeal against his extradition but the appeal was officially rejected by the court on Friday.
In announcing the ruling, Justice Paul Burns of the High Court said that the UK had jurisdiction to prosecute the alleged offences that occurred on its territory.
During Friday's court hearing, Hughes was described as "the ringleader" of a group smuggling people into the UK, said the report.
He was accused of conspiring with others in smuggling illegal migrants into the UK between May 1, 2018 and Oct. 24, 2019.
The court heard that the migrants were smuggled in commercial trailers owned and operated by Hughes and that Hughes paid the drivers, including that of the truck which carried the 39 Vietnamese migrants.