Philippine Daily Inquirer

BORED AND BROKE, VIETNAM MIGRANTS RISK LIVES FOR RICHES IN EUROPE

- —AFP

HANOI—YOUNG, aspiration­al and poor Vietnamese are risking their lives to travel to Europe, taking on large debts to join well-worn traffickin­g routes in the hope of a better future thousands of miles from their rural homes.

The dangers of illegal crossings into Europe were laid bare this week when 31 men and eight women were found dead in a refrigerat­ed truck in Britain.

It is feared that most were from Vietnam.

Many Vietnamese migrants come from just a handful of central provinces, where smugglers prey on disaffecte­d youth lured by the prospect of overseas work.

Bored by village life and fed up with a lack of opportunit­y, the allure of overseas riches is enough to tempt many to embark on the risky trips.

Many belong to Vietnam’s booming, social-media obsessed population of under 30s, often following relatives or friends to the United Kingdom, France or Germany.

Greased by smuggling networks with links in remote Vietnamese towns and throughout eastern Europe, migrants can pay up to $40,000 for a ticket out of poverty, borrowing from relatives or taking huge loans.

They are often promised princely salaries of up to 3,000 pound sterling ($3,800) a month, around three times the annual income in Vietnam’s poorest provinces. But the reality is often far different.

Some end up owing thousands of dollars to smugglers and money lenders who front cash for the treacherou­s journeys. Saddled by huge debts, many face the risk of exploitati­on along the way.

“They really have a lack of awareness on the reality of working in Europe,” Paris-based migration expert Nadia Sebtaoui told Agence France-presse (AFP), adding that many took jobs as manicurist­s or cannabis farmers, or even sex workers.

Just a few provinces in central Vietnam supply most illegal migrants, according to Antislaver­y Internatio­nal, ECPAT UK and Pacific Links Foundation.

The region has been largely overlooked by Vietnam’s breakneck economic growth, and for most young people, the only jobs on offer are in factories, constructi­on or on the fields.

Meanwhile, migrant success stories ricochet across many small towns, where remittance­s have transforme­d the homes and aspiration­s of many.

“We live on money sent from our people abroad,” said the uncle of Nguyen Dinh Tu, a 27-year-old man feared to have died in the ill-fated truck.

In his village Phu Xuan, once a poor farming community in Nghe An province, signs of that wealth abound. Newly renovated brick homes have replaced shacks. Bicycles have been upgraded for motorbikes and cars.

“The money sent from our people abroad has changed the face of this village. That’s why young ones just leave,” said Tu’s uncle, sitting in the new home his missing nephew helped to finance at a cost of nearly $13,000.

That’s a huge sum in Nghe An, where the average annual per capita income is around $1,200, well below the national average of about $2,400.

It’s not hard to find someone who can help you get to Europe—for a price.

Russia is easy enough to get to—a tourist visa or fake passport often does the trick—and then criminal networks dotted across eastern Europe help migrants along, often for additional fees. Most migrants continue their westward journey overland.

The migrants on the ill-fated truck found this week might have paid thousands of dollars for a spot in the refrigerat­ed trailer.

But tragedy is often not a deterrent. Even if many of the 39 dead were confirmed to be Vietnamese, it might not be enough to stop future migrants from taking the same journey.

“If someone’s really desperate and if their life seems hopeless ... they may still think ‘I’ll be lucky,’” said Michael Brosowski, founder of Blue Dragon, a Vietnam-based antitraffi­cking nongovernm­ental organizati­on.

 ?? —REUTERS ?? PRAYERS A candle is lit in a church in Vietnam for 39 illegal migrants found dead in a truck in the United Kingdom.
—REUTERS PRAYERS A candle is lit in a church in Vietnam for 39 illegal migrants found dead in a truck in the United Kingdom.

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