It could be the driver had nothing to do with the Chinese victims found dead in a container driven by him from Purfleet to Grays, after arriving via Zeebrugge. However, it is understandable the police are keen to understand just what his role was. Who hired him? Has he done it before? How - as a 25-year old rookie lorry driver - has he managed to afford a £300,000 house in a rural area, even mortgaged up to the eyeballs, especially if his girlfriend expecting twins is unable to work? How was it worth his while to drive, as a 'self-employed' lorry driver all the way from Portadown, Co. Armagh, Northern Ireland, having to travel via Holyhead in Wales, if he knew nothing at all about the apparent illegal immigrant smuggling (possibly as slave labour) and whiling away three days awaiting the arrival of the ship?
Truth is, the Chinese form one of the largest group of non-EU citizens arriving in the UK, most of them registering as students.
We know Chinese gang-masters exist, for they were behind the 58 found dead in a similar lorry 2002 on a roadside in Austria and behind the 21 cockle-pickers who drowned in Morecambe Bay, earning just £1
per diem.
ISTM this is huge insofar as the police may have smashed a well-organised ring of highly organised, ruthless people smugglers. If the average migrant pays £10,000 for the journey 5,000 miles out of China, then someone somewhere has pocketed £390,000 +.
Maybe that is the answer as to how it could be worth while to a simple Northern Irish lorry driver with a love of C&W and Ulster Unionist loyalism.
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/chinese-gang-charged-18-000-for-ticket-to-uk-3rml99n3x [paywall]