As many as 50 refugees were found dead in a parked truck in Austria near the Hungarian border on Thursday, and German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the discovery had shaken European leaders discussing the migrant crisis at a Balkans summit.
Police made the grisly discovery in the 7.5-tonne truck stopped on the A4 motorway near the town of Parndorf, apparently since Wednesday, Hans Peter Doskozil, police chief in the province of Burgenland, told a news
conference. He said he could not put an exact figure on the number of victims, whose bodies had begun to decompose.
“We
can assume that it could be 20 people who died. It could also be 40, it
could be 50 people,” he said. Merkel told a news conference at the
summit on the West Balkans in Vienna: “We are of course all shaken by
the appalling news.
This reminds us that we must tackle quickly
the issue of immigration and in a European spirit – that means in a
spirit of solidarity – and to find solutions.”
Tens of thousands
of people, mainly from Africa and the Middle East, have put to sea this
year in the hope of reaching Europe, often dangerously packed into small
vessels that were never designed to cross the Mediterranean.
Those
who make it ashore and others traveling by land have increasingly tried
to make their way north via the Balkans, causing tension among
countries along the route.
Hungary plans to reinforce its
southern border with helicopters and mounted police, and is considering
using the army as record numbers of migrants passed through coils of
razor-wire into Europe.
Investigations were underway in Austria
and Hungary after the bodies were discovered. The truck had Hungarian
number plates, a Hungarian official said. Janos Lazar, Prime Minister
Viktor Orban’s chief of staff, said a Romanian citizen had registered
the number plate in the eastern Hungarian town of Kecskemet.
Police
limited the motorway to one lane while forensic experts checked over
the truck parked on the hard shoulder. Austrian Chancellor Werner
Faymann told the summit: “The refugees who died today wanted to save
their own lives by fleeing, but instead lost their lives at the hands of
traffickers. It shows once again how necessary it is to save human
lives by fighting criminal traffickers.
It shows that we must
take responsibility and give asylum to those people who are fleeing.”
“Every week we learn of more deaths and drownings on the Mediterranean
route because the boats people are packed on are unseaworthy or
overcrowded. Now we are hearing of cases of mass deaths along the land
journey.
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