A Hungarian court has convicted 14 people smugglers over the deaths of 71 Syrians, Afghans and Iraqis who suffocated in the back of a locked truck in 2015, just days before Germany decided to open its borders temporarily to refugees and migrants.
One Afghan and three Bulgarians were each given 25 years in jail for playing leading roles in the crime, and ignoring the screams and pleas for help of their victims, whom they left to die in a sealed and almost airless transporter for frozen chicken.
The 59 men, eight women and four children were loaded into the truck near the Serbia-Hungary border on August 26th, 2015, at the height of a crisis that saw more than one million people escaping war and poverty try to reach wealthy European Union states via the so-called Balkan route.
Prosecutors said they died “in horrendous conditions” just hours later as the truck was travelling through Hungary, and its driver fled after parking the vehicle on the side of a major Austrian motorway leading from the Hungarian border to Vienna.
Hungarian state prosecutor Gabor Schmidt requested life sentences for the four main accused, saying they had knowingly let their desperate passengers die.
Desperate shouts
During the trial, Mr Schmidt presented an intercepted telephone conversation between the alleged ringleader in the smuggling operation, Afghan citizen Samsoor Lahoo (31) and an accomplice who said the Bulgarian truck driver could hear the refugees shouting and banging desperately for its doors to be opened.
“Let them die instead. That’s an order,” Mr Lahoo allegedly replied.
“If they die, let him dump them in a forest in Germany.”
Mr Lahoo played down these words as mere “thoughtless remarks” and insisted that he – having used smuggling networks himself to reach Hungary in 2013 – “had not wanted anyone’s death”.