Austrian police find migrants in “horror box” under truck

Austrian police find migrants in “horror box” under truck
A general view of Schwechat in Austria where police said Wednesday they found 8 migrants in life-threatening conditions hidden inside a narrow wooden pallet box attached to a truck. (Shutterstock)
Short Url
Updated 09 February 2022
Follow

Austrian police find migrants in “horror box” under truck

Austrian police find migrants in “horror box” under truck
  • Police said the migrants, who were from Turkey, had been trafficked from Romania via Hungary to Austria
  • The migrants described their hiding places as “horror box," police said

BERLIN: Austrian police say they found eight migrants in life-threatening conditions hidden inside a narrow wooden pallet box that had been attached to the underside of a truck.
Police said the migrants, who were from Turkey, had been trafficked from Romania via Hungary to Austria. Several of them suffered from hypothermia during the trip in freezing temperatures and some had fainted because they were exposed to the truck’s exhaust fumes for hours, police said in a statement Wednesday.
The migrants described their hiding places as “horror box,” police said.
The driver of the truck, a 39-year-old Turkish man, was arrested, police said. A 56-year-old Turkish accomplice was also arrested.
They did not reveal any further details on the traffickers or the migrants.
Austrian investigators discovered the migrants and arrested the driver last month on a highway stop near Schwechat, southeast of Vienna, after they were tipped off by German authorities but they only published the incident Wednesday. The accomplice was arrested Friday in the Austrian city of Graz where he lives.
They said the driver confessed to having smuggled up to 40 migrants to Austria on eight trips. Each migrant had to pay between 15,000 to 16,000 euros ($17,150 to $18,300) for the dangerous ride.
“This case shows once again how inhumane organized trafficking criminals act,” Austrian Interior Minister Gerhard Karner said, according to ORF. “We must ensure that a robust protection of the EU’s external borders deprives these criminals of their business basis.”