Bodies of 19 suffocated Ethiopians found on truck in DRC
Bodies of 19 Ethiopian migrants who had died of asphyxia in a lorry carrying nearly 100 stowaways were found by Congolese border guards after being alerted by a “nauseous” smell, officials said on Saturday.
Seventy-six other Ethiopians were found still alive when the Zambian-registered truck was stopped on Thursday in the southeast of Congo, close to the border with Zambia.
“We stopped this vehicle … because of the nauseous smell which was coming from the trailer,” said Jean-Pierre Lubosha, the local head of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) border guard (DMG).
Lubosha said the survivors stated that they had fled their country to head to southern Africa, passing through Kenya, in search of better lives.
The lorry’s crew had claimed to be transporting small fish.
The lorry’s crew had claimed to be transporting small fish.
“The bodies were handed over to the Zambian authorities on Thursday. We interviewed the survivors who all claimed to be Ethiopian nationals,” said Lubosha.
“We congratulate the Congolese authorities for their vigilance, allowing them to discover this scandalous human trafficking, implicating three Zambian members of the (lorry) crew,” said Zambian vice consul David Nyangulu.
He added that an international investigation was underway to dismantle the people smuggling network.