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‘Up to 50’ refugees found dead in lorry on Austrian motorway

Forensics officers investigate a lorry on the shoulder of a motorway in Austria, near the Hungarian border yesterday. At least 20 refugees were found dead in the vehicle 
Forensics officers investigate a lorry on the shoulder of a motorway in Austria, near the Hungarian border yesterday. At least 20 refugees were found dead in the vehicle  Forensics officers investigate a lorry on the shoulder of a motorway in Austria, near the Hungarian border yesterday. At least 20 refugees were found dead in the vehicle  (Ronald Zak/AP)

Austrian police have discovered the badly decomposing bodies of at least 20 – and possibly up to 50 – refugees piled in a lorry parked on the shoulder of the main motorway from Budapest to Vienna.

The shocking find came as Austria hosted a summit in Vienna on Europe’s refugee crisis for western Balkan nations, which have been overwhelmed this year by the tens of thousands of people trying to get into Europe via their


territory.

Police ordered reporters at the scene 25 miles south east of Vienna to move away from the vehicle, a white refrigeration lorry with images of food items on it.

The state of the bodies in the hot summer day made establishing their identities and even the exact number of dead people difficult, but the total number could rise to 50, said Hans Peter Doskozil, chief of Burgenland police.

The lorry was apparently abandoned on Wednesday and its back door was left open, Mr Doskozil said. It had Hungarian number plates but writing on the side and back of it was in Slovak. The state of the bodies suggested the people could have been dead for several days.

Interior minister Johanna Mikl-Leitner condemned the traffickers.

“Human smugglers are criminals,” she said in a statement. 

“Those who still think that they are gentle helpers of refugees are beyond saving.”

Speaking on the sidelines of the refugee crisis conference, Austrian chancellor Werner Faymann said the deadly tragedy showed how critical it was for nations to work together on solutions to the influx of


migrants.

“Today refugees lost the lives they had tried to save by escaping, but lost them in the hand of traffickers,” he told reporters.

German chancellor Angela Merkel, who was also at the summit, said she was “shaken by the awful news that up to 50 people lost their lives on their way to look for more security”.

“This reminds us that we in Europe need to tackle the problem quickly and find solutions in the spirit of solidarity,” she said.

The lorry apparently used to belong to the Slovak chicken meat company Hyza, part of the Agrofert Holding, which is owned by the Czech finance minister Andrej Babis.

Agrofert Holding, in a statement, said it had sold the lorry in 2014. The new owners did not remove the lorry’s logos as required and the Hyza company has nothing to do with this lorry now, the company said.

On one side of the lorry was the slogan “Honest chicken” while writing on the back read “I taste so well because they feed me so well.”

The Hungarian government said the lorry’s number plates were registered by a Romanian citizen in the central city of Kecskemet.

Refugees fleeing war and poverty from the Middle East, Africa and Asia are flocking to Europe by the hundreds of thousands this year.

Many follow the Balkans route, from Turkey to Greece by sea, up north to Macedonia by bus or foot, by train through Serbia and then walking the last few miles into EU member Hungary.

That avoids the more dangerous Mediterranean Sea route from north Africa to Italy, where the bodies of 51 refugees were found on Wednesday in the hull of a smugglers’ boat rescued off Libya’s northern coast.

Once inside the 28-nation EU, most refugees seek to reach richer nations such as Germany, The Netherlands, Austria or Sweden.